The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Study examines little-known WWII internment camp in Alaska
By RACHEL D'ORO JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska©2025 GPlusMedia Inc.
3 Comments
Login to comment
Globalista
It´s interesting that Japan didm´t create internment camps to Chinese and others foreigners during WW2...these foreigners could just go about their business as usual freely...and so was the country of Brazil who had the largest Japanese population in the world after Japan,,,they also didn´t intern foreigners unlikee their neighbouring countries like Peru,Bolivia etc...
Paul Evans
As of December 1941, there were 2,138 civilians of Allied nations in Japan -- 1,044 Americans, 690 British, 188 Canadians, 109 Dutch, 41 Australians, 38 Belgians, 19 Norwegians, and 9 Greeks (General Conditions of External Police Affairs, Mid-1941, Vol. 1). Total Allied civilian internees of the Japanese estimated to be 132,895 (50,740 men, 41,895 women, 40,260 children); of these, there were 15,000 deaths (Bernice Archer, The Internment of Western Civilians Under the Japanese, 2004).
Christopher Blackwell
What interesting was how few German and Italian Americans were interned. There was a strong racist tone tot he Japanese American internment.