What happened to the Japanese and Japanese Americans living in the United States during World War ll? Provide evidence from the documents.

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What happened to the Japanese and Japanese Americans living in the United States during World War ll? Provide evidence from the documents.
Document 1
No charges had been filed against these
people nor had any hearing been held.
Evacuation was on
a Racial, or, perhaps more accurately, on
ancestral grounds. It was the 'largest single
forced
migration in American History..' The
responsibility of the Military was tremendous;
the
spectacular victories of Japan, the crippling of
our fleet at Pearl Harbor, the possibility of
invasion
of our west coast-all were facts of tragic
import, and at the time, were considered
more than
ample justification of the mass exodus. In
addition, there was the threat of public
retaliation
against the Japanese-American population.
We may feel that racial antagonisms fanned
the flame
of decision, that political pressures were of no
little consequence in supporting the military
action.
Transcribed Image Text:Document 1 No charges had been filed against these people nor had any hearing been held. Evacuation was on a Racial, or, perhaps more accurately, on ancestral grounds. It was the 'largest single forced migration in American History..' The responsibility of the Military was tremendous; the spectacular victories of Japan, the crippling of our fleet at Pearl Harbor, the possibility of invasion of our west coast-all were facts of tragic import, and at the time, were considered more than ample justification of the mass exodus. In addition, there was the threat of public retaliation against the Japanese-American population. We may feel that racial antagonisms fanned the flame of decision, that political pressures were of no little consequence in supporting the military action.
In the light of retrospection and true
evaluation the evacuation may have been
unnecessary, but
the fact remains that we, as a nation, were in
the most potentially precarious moment of
our
history-stunned, seriously hurt, unorganized
for actual war...
Born free and equal, photographs of the loyal Japanese Americans
at Manzanar Relocation Center, Inyo County,
California, Ansel Adams. 1944
Transcribed Image Text:In the light of retrospection and true evaluation the evacuation may have been unnecessary, but the fact remains that we, as a nation, were in the most potentially precarious moment of our history-stunned, seriously hurt, unorganized for actual war... Born free and equal, photographs of the loyal Japanese Americans at Manzanar Relocation Center, Inyo County, California, Ansel Adams. 1944
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