Japanese Interment; Well I tell you first that Japanese interment was a camp for any American who has any heritage of Japanese family in the past. It was during WWII and those camps have a total at of 110000 of Japanese heritage who lived on the Pacific coast. It all started when Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the U.S. government the internment in 1942. Really what did they do, like I said because of Japanese ancestry and some reason bad advice and popular opinion. So the President(Roosevelt) signed an executive order on February 1942 to relocation of Japanese ancestry to concentration camps. Many families was forced to sell their previous item like their house, their stores, and most of their assets, why cause they where forced to not bring any personal item expect maybe clothes, and your family. Japanese family were held in temporary centers because the camps were just not yet completed. Plus almost two-thirds of the interns were NISEI, or Japanese Americans born in the United States. Plus what was so racism about this if you never been to Japan or a Japanese-American veterans of WWI, if your Japanese, you was forced to leave your home and go to those camps sites. When the camps were done in the western states, Families would have to dined together at mess hall and like all children, they have to go to school. Plus at those camps, adults had the option of working for a salary of 5 dollars per day. Plus you think that those intern were nice for Japanese but it was not because here a reason why the Japanese wanted to flee those intern.
On the whole, however, life in the relocation centers was not easy. The camps were often too cold in the winter and too hot in the summer. The food was mass produced army-style grub. And the interns knew that if they tried to flee, armed sentries who stood watch around the clock, would shoot them.


This is how the camps look like or where the japanese have or forced to live.
This is how the camps look like or where the japanese have or forced to live.

Fred KorematsuHe was the one who could go against the government who relocation action in the courts. This case was called Korematsu vs. The United States,When the order was repealed, many found they could not return to their hometowns. Hostility against Japanese Americans remained high across the West Coast into the postwar years as many villages displayed signs demanding that the evacuees never return. As a result, the interns scattered across the country. But Fred did not wanted to go in their intern camps because it just punishment for attacking Pearl Harbor and wanted this to stop this nightmare but could'nt cause he was Japanese and was not supported to do anything.
The guy who survived the japanese intern and became known for all japanese that we don't belong in those camps
The guy who survived the japanese intern and became known for all japanese that we don't belong in those camps

FinallyIn 1980, Fred got something what all survivors of the intern wanted; a apologize because the same year president carter through that he should put Japanese into camps or let the government do something with them. They did plus him it was called CWRIC to see want is happening in those camps. The government could'nt find anything about them doing any in those camps, so the government payed every survivors of the intern including Fred Korematsu 20000. Then in 1988 President Reagan formed a apologize to all survivors who lived in those intern camps including the person who made this all possible Fred Korematsu. Throughout the payment to their survivors or the heirs of them a total of 1.6 billion dollars.
Quick notesDuring when intern were in thoughts of making, japanese were just like Africa American, they just can't go anywhere without racism. What I means that Japanese were not allowed where white lived, as seen below that it shown a paper where japanese or japanese origin are not allowed in area in the countries.Then another paper down below the other one now tells Japanese or ancestry to get out of the area and move into the intern camps by 12 o' clock noon Tuesday 7, 1942.
A document that shown Japanese are not allow in these area.
A document that shown Japanese are not allow in these area.

A document that shown Japanese and Japanese ancestry were to leave to their area and move into the camps.
A document that shown Japanese and Japanese ancestry were to leave to their area and move into the camps.