6 million people died in the Holocaust during World War II. The Holocaust was harsh, brutal, and a very sad event where Nazi Germany captured and killed Jews in camps. The bombing of Pearl Harbor led to Japanese Americans getting put into camps because of their origin. All though both of these were concentration camps they were very different. The camps were different because the care of the people, the purpose and the aftermath was different.
The purpose of the concentration camps were different. The Nazis put the Jews in concentration camps out of hatred. The Nazis hated the Jews because they were receiving most of the money. The Nazis hated the Jews so put them in camps and tortured and killed them out of hatred. The Americans put the Japanese in concentration camps out of fear. The Americans thought that any American with Japanese origin was spying for the Japanese. They removed every Japanese American from the coast of California (since it's closest to Japan) and put them in camps. The Jews were
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The Japanese Americans were allowed to leave after the war ended. After the war, the Americans released the Japanese back to the coast of California. The Americans didn’t help the Japanese reconstruct their life back together. In the beginning of the war Japanese Americans were forced to leave their homes and businesses. The Americans didn’t give them their life back. The Japanese had to start a new life from scratch. After the war the Jews who weren’t captured left Germany. After the Holocaust the Jews immediately left Germany afraid of what Germany would do in the future about Jews. The Jews left Germany and went off to Israel. Most of the Jews were killed after the war. The Nazis told the Jews that if they worked hard that they would be granted freedom. That never happened. Instead they were all killed and tortured to death. The Japanese Americans were allowed to leave after the war while the Jews
Both of the camps violated people's rights as citizens. The Nazi and the Japanese camps were illegal and a complete violation of people’s freedom. Both the Jews and the Japanese people were forced out of their homes. Ronald Reagan addressed this when he said, “Over one hundred thousand persons of Japanese ancestry were removed from their homes…” Anne Frank also addressed this in her diary on November 19, 1942, when she stated, “They knock on every door, asking whether any Jews live there. If so, the whole family is immediately taken away.” The Japanese and the Jews were both considered “the enemy”. The Jews were the Nazi’s enemy and the Japanese were America’s enemy. These a good points but they are not strong enough. The camps were both illegal but one is more illegal than the other. The Japanese camps were more illegal because there is more freedom in the U.S. than there is in Germany. Just because the Japanese and the Jews were forcefully take out of their homes, they are not the same thing. This point makes them alike but not the same. The Jewish and the Japanese were the enemy but not of the same people. Despite their differences, the Nazi and the Japanese camps did have quite a bit in common but that does not make them the
Throughout history of the world , we have experienced many horrific occurrences, two of these being the Holocaust and Japanese Internment. Although both of these incidents are terrible, the Holocaust was much more miserable. The Jewish people were placed into Concentration camps by the Nazis, but Adolph Hitler was racist towards them. The Japanese were relocated to Internment camps. The way of life in these camps is way negligent.
Both the Jewish and Japanese camps were discriminatory towards the Jewish and Japanese race. However the Japanese internment camps were put into place out of fear, because Japan dropped a bomb on the United States. While the Jewish concentration camp was put into place because the Jewish “caused” the Great depression. However the camps are similar because they were made for the same reason which was racial discrimination. Both the Jewish and Japanese camp homes were ransacked, and were forcefully put out their homes. Their business were also taken away. Therefore they were put in the camps against their will and were not happy with living there. In both America and Germany the government claimed innocent, when really they were the guilty ones. If it were not for the United States of Germany government the camps would have never been created. Which would have never led to racial discrimination towards the Jewish or Japanese. Many would think that America was just as guilty as Germany, for the only difference is the amount of people killed. Although some if these points are true, they are not strong enough. The Japanese were put into the camps out of fear while the Jews were put into camp for the feeling of ultimate power
Throughout history of the world , we have experienced many horrific occurrences, two of these being the Holocaust and Japanese internment. Although both of these incidents are terrible, the Holocaust was much worse. The Jewish people were put ti to concentration camps but by Nazis by Adolph Hitler was racist towards them. The Japanese were relocated to internment camps. The way of life in these camps are way worse then anyone knows.
First, Nazi concentration camps and Japanese internment camps were not essentially the same thing because the Jews were not being treated like people, while the Japanese resumed a normal life. First, in Anne Frank's diary it says, “The people get almost nothing to eat, much less to drink”(Anne Frank's diary, October 9th,1942) . In the Nazi concentration camps they weren’t even given the luxury of food. It was watered down porridge, which gave them absolutely no nutritional value. To make matters worse, water was only available 1 hour a day. Many people would go days without food and water. Killing the weak and the sick. Next, while in the Japanese internment camps they had plenty of food and water. They had healthy food
In many times throughout history groups of people have been discriminated against based on race or religion. These people receive inferior rights because of the discrimination. In some cases they do not get citizenship, in others they are segregated from others, and physically harmed. Two groups of people that faced discrimination near World War II (WWII) were the Jewish people and Japanese Americans. Both groups faced very different types of discrimination by different oppressors with different motives yet their treatment was very similar and many events paralleled each other. The treatment of Japanese in WWII internment camps was as harsh as the Holocaust's treatment of the Jewish people.
Japanese internment camps from 1942 to 1946 were an exemplification of discrimination, many Japanese Americans were no longer accepted in their communities after the Bombing of Pearl Harbor. They were perceived as traitors and faced humiliation due to anti-Japanese sentiment causing them to be forced to endure several hardships such as leaving behind their properties to go an imprisoned state, facing inadequate housing conditions, and encountering destitute institutions. The Bombing of Pearl Harbor occurred on December 7, 1941 (Why I Love a Country that Once Betrayed Me). This led president Roosevelt to sign the executive order 9066, which authorized the army to remove any individual that seemed as a potential threat to the nation (“Executive Order 9066”) This order allowed the military to exclude “‘any or all persons from designated areas, including the California coast.”’ (Fremon 31). Many Japanese opposed to leave the Pacific Coast on their own free will (Fremon 24) . Japanese Americans would not be accepted in other areas if they moved either.Idaho’s governor stated, Japanese would be welcomed “only if they were in concentration camps under guard”(Fremon 35). The camps were located in Arizona, Arkansas, Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, and California where thousands of Japanese Americans eventually relocated. (“Japanese Americans at Manzanar”) The internment lasted for 3 years and the last camp did not close until 1946. (Lessons Learned: Japanese Internment During WW2)
The issues of Japanese-American internment camps is one of the most controversial, yet important time periods of American history. Many have asked: Why should we learn about this event? The event of Japanese-American internment camps has changed the way America and its citizens are looked upon. As Americans, this event is important to learn so that an injustice like this will never happen again in our history. This event has helped many people gain more rights and civil liberties. This event has also helped other groups fight for their rights and freedoms. Although this event had caused fear and pain, it had changed America and its treatment toward citizens of different descents and ethic backgrounds.
There is a strong similarity between the German government who used concentration camps to imprison Jewish people and the U.S. government who interned Japanese Americans. For the Americans, it was thought that any and all Japanese citizens could be potential spies and attack the U.S. In the U.S., the U.S. created internment camps and held Japanese families captive. In Germany, it was believed that Germans were elite and the Jewish people caused
First the Jewish people were killed, maybe not at first but soon they would be no good to the Nazi’s they would kill the weak and sick jewish people. Unlike Jewish camps the Japanese were
Jews were killed because Hitler was an evil man, as opposed to, the US government did not kill any Japanese-Americans on purpose, their death was of natural causes. The Jewish concentration camp’s were a lot harsher. Like when the old people and children could not work, they were gassed in a chamber. Another reason why the two camp’s would not be the same would be that the Japanese-Americans had to govern themselves, like what George Takei said in his interview about the Japanese Internment camps“ We help church services, had our own newspapers, built our own schools, and some of us even made camouflage nets for the US army.” All of these reasons might not be true, because the US could have been lying, so that is what makes this so interesting; the different
Although World War Two began in 1939, the United States did not enter the conflict until 1941. The country's entrance into the war was caused by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. After the attack the government had suspicion that the Japanese Americans were spies. So, congress passed the Executive order 9066, stating all Japanese Americans would be relocated to detainment camps.They remained in these camps for two years. Japanese Americans faced many difficulties in the detainment camps.
During World War II it was a terrible time for a big group of people, The Jews, They went through the worst kind of pain. What we have nightmares about they experience it firsthand. Over six million Jews were slaughtered, tortured, beaten, and starved to death. The Holocaust was a terrible time for the Jews in the concentration camps where a number of catastrophic events took place in Eastern Europe. All of this was caused by a single man, Hitler, He was behind the death of millions of people.
Japanese-American internees and prisoners of war were made to feel invisible. The guards at the prisoner of war camp tortured Louie by making him dance for them everyday. “Everyday at gunpoint, Louie was forced to dance while his guards roared with laughter,”(Hillenbrand 140).The Japanese guards were making Louie feel humiliated. They treated him as if he was an animal. Not only did Louie was made to feel humiliated but also Louie and Phil are always getting beaten up by the Japanese guards. “Nearly every day, they flew into rages that usually ended with Phil and Louie being spat upon and bombarded with rocks and lit cigarettes,”(Hillenbrand 140). Louie and Phil were getting beaten up, where to the point they had no more strength. They were
(info) After the war had ended, the Japanese were freed from the imprisoning camps - although they were also left to rebuild their lives from scratch. Though their freedom was restored, the Japanese still had to go through some major after-effect disadvantages, such as poverty and society's negative