The first group of Japanese-American citizens was removed from the Tule Lake Relocation Center in California, to be dispersed among other United States internment camps.
In April 1942, Exclusion Order 346 was issued to force the Japanese-American citizens to live in assembly centers which were located in various open spaces such as fairgrounds and tracks.
Once out of government, he became an outspoken critic of the evacuation and internment of Japanese-American citizens.
The indelible Japaneseness of Japanese-American citizens justified their internment after Pearl Harbor.
His began his literary career in 1948 with his magazine article on the unlawful internment of Japanese-American citizens during World War II.
So did other Japanese-American citizens victimized by the wartime detention and related measures .
Internment of Japanese-American citizens in the US begins.
All through the war, our parents and other adults accurately referred to the camps holding our Japanese-American citizens as "concentration camps."
John Hersey attempts to chronicle the relocation of Japanese subjects (issei) and Japanese-American citizens (nisei) following the sneak attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor.
Truman praised the regiment, made up of Japanese-American citizens, "for victory over both the enemy and over prejudice".