or third-generation Japanese Americans, and the exhibit looks at the impact that the internment of their parents’ generation in concentration camps during WWII had on their upbringing.
To reckon with this injustice, the Irei Project: National Monument for the WWII Japanese American Incarceration ... treatment that had only intensified during the war, to the point of terrorism.
An art installation in Nihonmachi Alley commemorating the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II was smeared with black ink over the weekend.
a Japanese American who won a Supreme Court case over her incarceration during World War II. "Her resolve allowed thousands of Japanese Americans to return home and rebuild their lives ...
To reckon with this injustice, the Irei Project: National Monument for the WWII Japanese American Incarceration ... treatment that had only intensified during the war, to the point of terrorism.