Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - What was the environment in which Canada imprisoned Japanese concentration camps in World War II? Provide three evidences to prove the harsh environment of Japanese concentration camps, thank you.

What was the environment in which Canada imprisoned Japanese concentration camps in World War II? Provide three evidences to prove the harsh environment of Japanese concentration camps, thank you.

During World War II, there were no concentration camps for Japanese nationals in Canada. In fact, there were not many Japanese in Canada at that time, all of them were in the United States.

Concentration camps in the United States are settlements built according to the specifications of military camps. It consists of rows of rooms 7 meters wide and 8 meters long, arranged in a row. A row of barracks share a laundry room, a canteen and a toilet. There is no gas stove and running water in the room, and the bath is completely in the open air. A Japanese family of six or seven people, assigned to such a room, is their new home.

The fence of their new home is the barbed wire of the army. Outside the courtyard wall of their new home, there stood armed American soldiers. On the watchtower of the army, strong searchlights illuminate their houses every night, and the situation in the houses is unobstructed under the eyes of American soldiers. Even Japanese female expatriates take a bath, and American soldiers are not shy. When they put forward this idea to the US military, they saw that their soldiers didn't care: Oh, come on, are you still Americans? The implication is that since you don't want to go back to Japan, don't make irresponsible remarks about the supervision of American soldiers.