4 Quotes About Japanese Internment

Growing up in the United States, I never thought about how it would feel to be a Japanese citizen during World War II. I didn’t doubt my country’s commitment to fight evil, nor did I question its justice. What I did wonder was what it would be like if the United States had sent our citizens to internment camps. I came across this amazing collection of japanese-internment quotes and couldn’t help but share them with you.

One day this war will end. And when it does,...
1
One day this war will end. And when it does, Tule Lake will be just a memory. Teresa R. Funke
2
We have no one to go to for help. Not even a church. Anything goes, now that our President Roosevelt signed the order to get rid of us. How can he do this to his own citizens? No lawyer has the courage to defend us. Caucasian friends stay away for fear of being labeled "Jap lovers." There's not a more lonely feeling than to be banished by my own country. There's no place to go. Kiyo Sato
3
Or was their guilt written plainly, and for all the world to see, across their face? Was it their face, in fact, for which they were guilty? Julie Otsuka