Tuesday, October 9, 2012

THE CAMP EXPERIENCE

TEMPORARY DETENTION CENTER  
1.Were Japenese Americans given adequate care and acommodations as they were rounded up?
Were they given assurances and clear information on what the future held for them?
(they wasnt given adequte care or accomodations due to the estimate of Japanese Americans,they only would recieve what tehy already ha,.they didnt recieve anything.)
PERMANENT WRA CAMPS
2.Discuss the claim by the U.S Government that the camps were for the protection of Japenese Americans.Were the barbed wire fences and guard towers meant to keep vigilantes out or Japanese Americans inmates in? (It was for both they feel that they were protecting the Japenese Americans but they may have been hurting them.
CAMP LIFE
3.Were the camps "restettlement communities",or prisons?What's the difference between the two?(There wasnt many differences but they were able to to take there belonging that didnt remind them of home)
4.Did the war Relocation Authority take measures to protect family life and privacy?(they looked for was to balance civil liberties and safty.they still invaded every home and gave them no privacy ther took evrything .there was limited measures to helping them they [ractically cured them selves there wasnt many nurses and the nurse was only able to take care of so many Japanese Americans.)
QUESTIONS OF LOYALTY
5.How did Japenese  Americans respond after being incarecerated without due process of law ,to question asking them whether or not they were unquestioningly loyal to this country?(they were willing to be questioned thinking that they might gain there freedom and it just might help them get out sooner.)
TULE LAKE SEGREGATION
6.Were those who answered 'NO "to the loyalty question clearly disloyal or were they voicing discontent with their treatment ?(they wre saying no because of the non-justice that was made to them so they would be happy to say no they could not claim loyalty any country if they were born in Japan.)
DRAFT RESISTERS
7.why did these young men resist being drafted into the military?write or improvise a conversation between two brothers in a internment camp who makes two different opposing decisions on the draft:one enlist the other resists.what are their points of agreement,if any ? how do they differ? is one brother patriotic than the other? (one brother wnats to go ,only really so that he may get the Freedom and he want to fight for the country ,he is tired of having to be trapped inside the Internment Camp.the other brother want to just be back home,and and he really just wants peace and to be with his family.)
MILITARY SERVICE
8.What did it take to fight for a country that kept your family interned behind barbed wire? (it took a lot to do this ,to be able to willingly fight for a country who has trapped you and your family behind barbed wire fences,they really only made ,you go for punishment if you wanted to go to this place they might even get so mad and not let you go)

How do we prevent the injustice of internment from happening again?perhaps it starts with learning about this historic mistake,as well as working to eliminate the causes for continuing racial prejudice today?          You can prevent by always trying to get along with the other cultures and races in America .Always forgive for the past as well as something you may do in the present because some people may take that problem seriously,it is easy to start a riot but it is hard to stop it.They should willingly fight for there country but always think about the others.


What do you think?what is your responsibility?what can you do as one individual?your voice and actions can be an important part not only of preventing the gross injustice of internment from happening again ,but also preventing the other negative effects of racial hatred and prejudice.


You as a individual can always try to show people the good qualities of life instead of bad qualities of life .People should be treated equally it doesn't matter where you are from where you were born because if you make fun of someone's race and think its OK someone can always do the same to you .that's why we should  all get along with each other .









                                                             INTERNMENT CAMP
    This is a images of the Internment Camp when the Japanese Americans first arrived
                            The National Archive house Dorothea Lange's photos from Mazanar and other camps
                                                                 Tom Kobayashi
This is a image of the men in the Internment Camp they are there with there belongings but only what doesnt remind them of home and this is three year ago.
           The National Archives house Dorothea Lange's photos from manzanar and other camps
THIS IS A IMAGE OF THE INTERNMENT CAMP ,THE JAPANESE AMERICAN ARE NOW JUST ARRIVING THERE WITH SOME OF THERE BELONGINGS .
                                           this image is also by Tom Kobayashi
                                                  RELOCATION CAMP
 THIS IS ALSO A IMAGE OF THE INTERNMENT CAMP .

THE TRAIN RIDE TO KOASKIA IT WAS CARRYING ONE HUNDRED AND ONE JAPANESE AMERICANS INTERNEE'S IN 1943


THIS IS A IMAGE OF THE LOCATION OF INTERNMENT CAMPS THAT THEY HELD THE JAPANESE AMERICANS IN .