Ugly History: Japanese American incarceration camps - Densho

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2019
  • Dig into the historic injustice of Japanese American incarceration camps, also known as internment camps, during World War II.
    --
    On December 7, 1941, 16 year-old Aki Kurose shared in the horror of millions of Americans when Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor. Unbeknownst to her, this shared experience would soon leave her family and over 120,000 Japanese Americans alienated from their country, both socially and physically. Densho explores the racism and paranoia that led to the unjust internment of Japanese Americans.
    Lesson by Densho, directed by Lizete Upīte.
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Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @Taylor-mb5nn
    @Taylor-mb5nn 4 года назад +10880

    The more I learn about history, I keep learning that we don't learn from history

    • @manuelsaavedra8081
      @manuelsaavedra8081 4 года назад +311

      Learning about and learning from are two different things after all

    • @razi_man
      @razi_man 4 года назад +91

      Being human does not give you humanity, I would be fine with this if this is only a small population and not almost the entire planet.

    • @windrunner9158
      @windrunner9158 4 года назад +64

      @@manuelsaavedra8081 Intellect vs Wisdom

    • @icy.diamond
      @icy.diamond 4 года назад +5

      ...Ya

    • @persimmon93
      @persimmon93 4 года назад +36

      Keeping migrant children in concentration camps where dozens have already died from poor hygienic conditions.

  • @pablog114
    @pablog114 4 года назад +7408

    "We learn history so we don't repeat our mistakes"

    • @kamini858
      @kamini858 4 года назад +35

      Absolutely true

    • @johnpatrick1647
      @johnpatrick1647 4 года назад +236

      And yet we've repeated the same mistakes over and over again for all of recorded history.

    • @AzraeIReaper
      @AzraeIReaper 4 года назад +82

      And yet we still incarcerate the Mexicans down at the border in similar fashions.

    • @sahinyasar9119
      @sahinyasar9119 4 года назад +14

      Too late

    • @intuendaecivilization9365
      @intuendaecivilization9365 4 года назад +40

      Say that to Japan, who still denies their war crimes in china. Check out unit 731.

  • @danika4135
    @danika4135 3 года назад +2479

    In school I was often told I was not “Asian enough” because I could not speak Japanese while my other Asian friends could speak their respective languages. My mother nor my grandparents could speak Japanese either. I found out this was due to my grandparents having to go into “hiding” so they wouldn’t be taken to the camps. They were relatively young and had to try to shed any Japanese culture/upbringing to quickly assimilate. They were never uprooted but they had already lost the Japanese they had known as kids. People don’t understand these events, while several years ago, greatly impacts generations to come.

    • @TN-ju4ro
      @TN-ju4ro 3 года назад +109

      Can relate, they decultured us

    • @prince_yt3406
      @prince_yt3406 2 года назад +1

      You’re white washed

    • @dinsals
      @dinsals 2 года назад +1

      Are you danika salceda?

    • @taro_paro
      @taro_paro 2 года назад +22

      @@prince_yt3406 Did you not even read what they commented? Maybe think a little before you reply to a comment.

    • @poppyperidot94
      @poppyperidot94 2 года назад +43

      @@Paonporteur there 100% something wrong with forgetting your cultures language ESP WHEN YOU ARE FORCED TO

  • @ns_ml137
    @ns_ml137 4 года назад +2867

    “War does not determine who is right - only who is left.” -Winston Churchill

    • @houssembenabdallah6599
      @houssembenabdallah6599 4 года назад +23

      Thank you for sharing that quote.

    • @TheJociman
      @TheJociman 4 года назад +135

      "It's not a Churchill quote but still a great one." -Austin Powers

    • @gauripriyadasbaruah7720
      @gauripriyadasbaruah7720 4 года назад +159

      Same guy that sawed Israel and India in half and killed millions of people
      He committed more war crimes than Us and France Combined (Speculation)

    • @gauripriyadasbaruah7720
      @gauripriyadasbaruah7720 4 года назад +55

      @ChoppedBlade He could have stopped that , Mountabatten wanted to not separate the country and most people starved and had no option but to kill each other
      And what about Israel , It was separated by his will

    • @azzzanadra
      @azzzanadra 4 года назад +23

      @@gauripriyadasbaruah7720 so what? how is him committing war crimes changes the fact that this is a true statement?
      if a criminal said gravity pulls things down will that stop gravity from working?

  • @rutujavartak7977
    @rutujavartak7977 4 года назад +5521

    I adored the way Aki held on to the potted plant and re planted it when she returned ..

  • @uuuu6590
    @uuuu6590 4 года назад +6655

    Seeing people trying to justify this by pointing out Japanese atrocities: these were civilians!

    • @chlorine5795
      @chlorine5795 4 года назад +756

      Exactly! two wrongs doesn't make a right. People try to see it as an American problem or a Japanese problem,not seeing that it's a human problem.

    • @sirhumphreyappleby8399
      @sirhumphreyappleby8399 4 года назад +83

      Irrelevant the Japanese were a people fighting the allies - it’s called total war and covering your bases. War has nothing to do with right and wrong.

    • @chlorine5795
      @chlorine5795 4 года назад +729

      @@sirhumphreyappleby8399 Yeah, But they didn't incarcerate the Japanese, Did they? They incarcerated American citizens. And,Why didn't they incarcerate all the Americans of German descent?...You see where I am going with this brother?

    • @cadenglass1387
      @cadenglass1387 4 года назад +206

      They were Americans

    • @cadenglass1387
      @cadenglass1387 4 года назад +271

      @@sirhumphreyappleby8399 what about the Germans and the Italians

  • @annadang5811
    @annadang5811 3 года назад +640

    I have friends of Japanese-American heritage and a lot of them told me they never learned Japanese at home because their parents/grandparents didn't want them to. I never truly understood how that could come to be as I perceived Japanese to be generally proud of their culture and heritage....
    But having watched this, it makes way too much sense that I just shed a few tears.......

    • @adachilover69
      @adachilover69 3 года назад +21

      Im a Japanese American and i dont know how to speak much Japanese because I never learned how to . I can only understand some its pretty hard for me when i visit my grandma in japan.

    • @felix_quintana
      @felix_quintana 2 года назад +27

      That is still happening in many lands. Just as example, in Mexico there are more than 60 native languages, but if the parents move to big cities they don't teach the language to the children because of fear of discrimination.

    • @gannielukks1811
      @gannielukks1811 Год назад

      Brasil sil

    • @IWantToStayAtYourHouse
      @IWantToStayAtYourHouse Год назад +4

      Thats so weird. I'm japanese australian and my parents wanted me to be good at japanese. Unfortunately i didnt take it seriously and flunked japanese school but now i regret it

    • @Not_L0gical
      @Not_L0gical Год назад

      This happened to me as well I would have probably grown up speaking Japanese if my great grandparents hadn’t of not taught my grandma japanese

  • @jjc5475
    @jjc5475 4 года назад +785

    it isn't about being better or worst. it is about not making the same mistakes again, not with japanese, not with mexicans. with no one.

    • @oppressormk2op547
      @oppressormk2op547 4 года назад +18

      the world:i think i forgot about something.
      china:if you forgot it must not be important.
      world: yeah you're right.
      people in chinese re education camps:👁👃👁

    • @arandomboi7611
      @arandomboi7611 3 года назад +11

      China still has camps for Muslims

    • @momopeach8896
      @momopeach8896 3 года назад +3

      Yes! Thank you! You said everything that I wanted to say!

    • @withcheeseproductions
      @withcheeseproductions 3 года назад +6

      Canada and Mexico built camps too for their Japanese population

    • @kikoferras7369
      @kikoferras7369 2 года назад +4

      @@withcheeseproductions And that makes what the US did less inhumane?

  • @duckgoesquack4514
    @duckgoesquack4514 4 года назад +4248

    One of my grandpa's friend was a kid in the Japanese internment camp. His father ran a food store in the camp. His family also lost there farm in California, and if they still had it, it would be worth millions

    • @Andreamom001
      @Andreamom001 4 года назад +323

      I once read about a man who took care of the farms of his interned Japanese neighbors throughout the war and returned them to them once they got out. A true hero. Yes, those farms are worth millions today.

    • @mrsmiley707
      @mrsmiley707 4 года назад +106

      A white man took the farm and is probably making good money now

    • @loki2240
      @loki2240 4 года назад +89

      @@mrsmiley707 - Actually, a corporation is probably making most of the money off of that land now. There are a lot less family farms today. Those that still exist are often still beholden to a corporate master. "White" Americans have literally "given away the farm" to corporations. And then of course it has extended to other industries and even to politics.

    • @campkira
      @campkira 4 года назад +4

      Japanese are collectivism and they are subject to their emperor so the true is they had to paid price for the war.... It just depend how the local decided.....

    • @sophiatroetel8389
      @sophiatroetel8389 4 года назад +37

      campkira what?

  • @wheredad729
    @wheredad729 4 года назад +2979

    My great grandma actually was sent to a Japanese internment camp she never liked to talk about it and sadly passed away in 2017

    • @lilithslittlemoon
      @lilithslittlemoon 4 года назад +86

      I know the feeling I’m so sorry to hear about that. My mom made a documentary called ‘For The Sake of The Children’ that interviewed mine just before she passed away and many others who decided to -it was beautiful, heartbreaking and somewhat disorienting at first to see them talk about it but so so powerful. I hope maybe one day those who are still with us will be empowered to speak out even though I know it’s so much deeper and complicated than that.
      thinking of your family ❤️💙

    • @marlonmoncrieffe0728
      @marlonmoncrieffe0728 4 года назад +18

      @@lilithslittlemoon
      Sweet! I'd love to see it!
      Back when I was in film school, I saw a great documentary short about Japanese internment, titled 'History and Memory' by Rea Tajiri, that I still think about every now and then.

    • @GenocidalSquid
      @GenocidalSquid 4 года назад +19

      Rest In Peace. Sorry for your Grandma...

    • @exhaustedciel
      @exhaustedciel 4 года назад +3

      Rip

    • @a.b.8606
      @a.b.8606 4 года назад +8

      My father was a POW in the first Gulf
      War. He also never likes to talk about it too.

  • @levinl6695
    @levinl6695 3 года назад +429

    Blaming Japanese people for Pearl Harbor is like blaming dogs because a wolf stole your sheep or something like that.

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable 2 года назад +39

      And blaming the entire police force for something Derik Chauvin did, resulting in defending the police and massive crime is also like blaming Japanese civilians for Pearl Harbor.

    • @ecstasycheese7390
      @ecstasycheese7390 2 года назад +19

      This is why school should stop collective punishment :>

    • @kaleidoscope3234
      @kaleidoscope3234 2 года назад +4

      @@funveeable The Japanese American didn't go through a life time of indoctrination and propaganda to become ruthless war criminals. All US police graduate from the same police training system as Derik Chauvin.

    • @BonnieBunny118
      @BonnieBunny118 2 года назад

      @@kaleidoscope3234 but that doesn’t make them guilty like Derek

    • @LarryWater
      @LarryWater 2 года назад +2

      Japanese civilians cheered and knew about the genocide committed by the Imperial military. Soldiers and sailors regular wrote to their wives and mothers.

  • @pacskulls7757
    @pacskulls7757 4 года назад +280

    I really enjoy seeing this. People need to learn EVERYONE'S suffering to be able to have compassion for them and make the world a better place.

  • @Subparanon
    @Subparanon 4 года назад +2439

    This is a great example of why you need to learn about your history or be doomed to repeat it. America was built and populated on the work of immigrants. They are us, and we are them.

    • @GAMEOVER-yy6zj
      @GAMEOVER-yy6zj 4 года назад +15

      Technically everyone but Africans is immigrant.

    • @-chairs-9541
      @-chairs-9541 4 года назад +3

      Immigrant?! Yh but only if their white right

    • @Subparanon
      @Subparanon 4 года назад +53

      @Cromwellian Republican It usually takes a century or more of integration before an immigrant population is viewed as 'all American'. People used to view Irish, Italian, and German immigrants with the same attitude people today view immigrants from Asia and the middle east. The Irish in particular were treated harshly for almost a century. But nobody would bat an eyelash at an Irish American president today. It has to do with assimilation as much as time though. Groups like the Amish have been in the US for several centuries now, but they live apart culturally and have not assimilated and so their values don't reflect the average persons and they are still not what the average person would think of as 'American'. And yes, to the American Indians, we are all settlers, but even that will fade in time much like the Romans to the Goths.

    • @dennisvance4004
      @dennisvance4004 4 года назад +6

      Subparanon we are not “a nation of immigrants“, we are a nation of Americans. My ancestors immigrated from Germany and Ireland. They left behind the flags of their former countries, became American citizens and a part of this country. My ancestors were coal miners and farmers. They came here legally. Anyone who knocks at the door and is allowed to enter is a visitor and a guess. “anyone who does not enter by the door […] but climbs up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber.” John 10:1

    • @dennisvance4004
      @dennisvance4004 4 года назад +3

      Subparanon dissimilation of them the Germans and Irish (my ancestors) and the others you mention did not come about because they protested and made demands. There was certainly not a class of privileged elites who took it upon themselves to be offended for these groups where they took no offense themselves. The immigrants from every country came to the US to be part of something greater than themselves, not to dictate to others.

  • @SILK97
    @SILK97 4 года назад +1849

    Damn I’ve never seen such a toxic Ted-Ed comment section. Comments calling out Ted for not covering other atrocities. Others saying “at least they were treated humanely” after having their livelihood stolen from them. Cmon ppl, these videos always seemed like such a positive place to learn, appreciate, and understand new things. Never wanted to see a comment section like this under a Ted-Ed vid. Regardless, thanks for the vid guys!

    • @lonelyspirit1370
      @lonelyspirit1370 4 года назад +20

      I agree

    • @thecockwambler2621
      @thecockwambler2621 4 года назад +49

      People are allowed to have opinions you know. If someone disagrees with the video the comment section is where they share it. Dont get all high and mighty thinking they're wrong so its ok to claim thier opinions as "toxic" or "hate speech"

    • @cadenglass1387
      @cadenglass1387 4 года назад +10

      @@randomdude9135 um...all the atrocities.......really ?

    • @lonelyspirit1370
      @lonelyspirit1370 4 года назад +6

      People can be so picky

    • @morifukui641
      @morifukui641 3 года назад +56

      Asian Americans will sadly ALWAYS be gaslight Ed for taking about our own issues. It's inescapable

  • @Theusualregularasiangirl
    @Theusualregularasiangirl 3 года назад +124

    My grandmother was only 2 when she went. My great grandmother was about in her mid 30s, my father told me that it’s apparently a very private thing . My grandma never talked about it. My uncle who is a Japanese history person was on a PBS documentary called Silent Sacrifice where he told the stories about the Japanese American citizens be wrongfully incarcerated with such horrible conditions.

    • @jman140692
      @jman140692 3 года назад

      Atleast they weren't tortured and brutally murdered slaves for 400 years and made it out with a nice reparation check

    • @ashelydoodles9334
      @ashelydoodles9334 3 года назад +29

      @@jman140692 This isn't the oppression Olympics.

    • @Theusualregularasiangirl
      @Theusualregularasiangirl 2 года назад +1

      @@Hndjdj400 mhm

  • @fhdgbvgvbvgws
    @fhdgbvgvbvgws 4 года назад +117

    My grandma was sent to an internment camp in Australia, and she has never received an apology or any compensation from the government. Her discrimination was so bad that she changed her Japanese name and refuses to talk about that time.

  • @johnversosas8298
    @johnversosas8298 4 года назад +1778

    Please do about atrocities committed by Americans in Filipino-American war. We need more of this.

    • @Wynter_PE
      @Wynter_PE 4 года назад +72

      @BC Bob we the viewers...?

    • @TheLolilol321
      @TheLolilol321 4 года назад +49

      @BC Bob we who live on the planet know as 'Earth'

    • @ow_ex7801
      @ow_ex7801 4 года назад +4

      @BC Bob who we?

    • @--------352
      @--------352 4 года назад +10

      @BC Bob we who exist in the solar system

    • @epg96
      @epg96 4 года назад +5

      But i heard Pinoys loved USA

  • @nocultist7050
    @nocultist7050 4 года назад +505

    Mr Miyagi's wife died there when he was fighting in a war as part of U.S. Army...

    • @whathell6t
      @whathell6t 4 года назад +35

      tommy aronson
      I think he read it from the novel adaptation of the Karate Kid. Yeah! It’s a thing.

    • @dennisvance4004
      @dennisvance4004 4 года назад +4

      NoCultist it’s disingenuous to make such statements without context. That someone died, regardless of where, while their husbands fought in the warr was not that unusual World War II. Women worked in munitions factories where there were explosions in which people lost their lives. For a time, more US civilians died as a result of industrial accidents than soldiers in World War II. Do you think it was any less painful for any soldier fighting the war who found out his wife back home had died?

    • @drvivekvirsingh2586
      @drvivekvirsingh2586 4 года назад +1

      Yeah right i saw it too in the karate kid movie

    • @dennisvance4004
      @dennisvance4004 4 года назад +1

      Rose Maria Joseph while men and women of good faith shake hands and leave the past behind there are those who, to signal their own virtue, want to revive the pain and cause strife. The truth then has to be told to put half truths to flight.

  • @Not_L0gical
    @Not_L0gical Год назад +17

    These make me so sad to watch, but also give me a sense of pride to know that my grandma survived this atrocity.

  • @kikacuneo4092
    @kikacuneo4092 4 года назад +55

    I love the plant symbolism where she held on to it through the whole story!

  • @chinesecabbagefarmer
    @chinesecabbagefarmer 4 года назад +516

    This message is more important today than it ever has been.

    • @mr.h5436
      @mr.h5436 4 года назад +7

      You have a point there. In the age of overpopulation and global warming, tens of millions will be on the road traveling to countries already stressed. What stories will be told next century?

    • @chinesecabbagefarmer
      @chinesecabbagefarmer 4 года назад +3

      @@mr.h5436 That's the kind of topic I'd like to have a sit-down conversation on.

    • @mr.h5436
      @mr.h5436 4 года назад +3

      @@chinesecabbagefarmer I have coffee!

    • @chinesecabbagefarmer
      @chinesecabbagefarmer 4 года назад +2

      @@mr.h5436 Alright, I'll see you on Thursday.

    • @thewrustywrench21
      @thewrustywrench21 4 года назад +5

      Yea, it’s way more important now then it was back when people were actually being discriminated against

  • @Noone-of-your-Business
    @Noone-of-your-Business 4 года назад +459

    Order 9066? So this is where George Lucas got his inspiration for the number from. Makes sense: "The removal of any suspected enemies".

    • @fxlxp
      @fxlxp 4 года назад +7

      Was looking for this comment😂

    • @cuttleb0nes
      @cuttleb0nes 4 года назад +3

      I noticed that too!!

    • @reinardish
      @reinardish 4 года назад

      @@fxlxp same

    • @LarryOfilms
      @LarryOfilms 4 года назад +2

      He really is into Japanese culture

    • @mistylover2082
      @mistylover2082 4 года назад +3

      @Varun Ramamurthi22 why does this remind me of star wars?

  • @KitCat898
    @KitCat898 4 года назад +69

    This isn’t taught enough. Fantastically done- we must learn from the past to never repeat.

  • @taylorleeyoutube
    @taylorleeyoutube 4 года назад +47

    I remember learning about this in my sixth grade class. Still heart breaking and I am glad there is a series to uncover these important parts of history now. Thanks TED!

  • @TheZeyon
    @TheZeyon 4 года назад +1341

    Home of the free, am I right?

    • @mysteriousmuffin6017
      @mysteriousmuffin6017 4 года назад +118

      T Clark That it actually isn’t. The USA was no better than the Soviet Union.

    • @jonirojonironin5353
      @jonirojonironin5353 4 года назад +149

      @ The point is USA is NOT the home of the free. Get it?

    • @smoggrog5155
      @smoggrog5155 4 года назад +7

      for me but not for you. and its gonna stay that way forever.

    • @chadarmstrong8073
      @chadarmstrong8073 4 года назад +34

      Is this the great america people are referring to?

    • @johanqian1858
      @johanqian1858 4 года назад +54

      @@smoggrog5155 yes,the American launched many wars all over the world,by name of freedom. the freedom is for the American not for anyone else

  • @Rioux1355
    @Rioux1355 4 года назад +177

    I just read “Daughter of Molokai”. Heavy focus on this very dark part of American history.

    • @sabrhardscope2120
      @sabrhardscope2120 3 года назад

      Japanese did it too us too. Their not innocent either. Look up the movie unbroken

    • @bloodur
      @bloodur 3 года назад +8

      @@sabrhardscope2120 POWs are not the same as citizens, hardscoper. I watched that movie too and enjoyed it, but completely false equivalency you're trying to make.

    • @jman140692
      @jman140692 3 года назад +1

      @@bloodur The Japanese have a history of torturting civilians look up the nanjing massacre in China. Even inside of Japan look at what they did to the Ainu also. Or how about what the did to the Korean comfort women.

    • @bloodur
      @bloodur 3 года назад +3

      @@jman140692 keep talking about japanese, and this event is about japanese Americans.
      Also thank you for informing me of those events. I am Chinese American; I think I know about Nanjing.

  • @arukakirigiri5055
    @arukakirigiri5055 3 года назад +89

    As a Filipino-American, someone once asked me a fascinating question on whether I would fight my birth country if ever the US and Philippines goes into war and I get drafted to serve.
    I said "Yes, I would fight in behalf of US in case I ever get drafted but that will never happen because I would've been sent to internment camps instead of being drafted"

    • @ennui9745
      @ennui9745 2 года назад

      The US and the Philippines are allies now, thankfully.

    • @gingertwerk472
      @gingertwerk472 2 года назад +14

      I don’t think the government could get away with that at this point in time, but you would probably be treated as badly by people as if you were in one.

    • @callmeyourmajesty09
      @callmeyourmajesty09 Год назад +1

      You should fight for your birth country

    • @arukakirigiri5055
      @arukakirigiri5055 Год назад

      @@callmeyourmajesty09 You are not gonna fight for the Philippines. You're fighting for the politicians.
      The tech of Philippines is dated because the military did not get any funding due to corruption.
      You are participating a war with outdated weapons making you more likely to die.
      And to make things worse, the people would be watching you die as they sit on the beach in USA using the military funding they stole.

    • @callmeyourmajesty09
      @callmeyourmajesty09 Год назад

      @@arukakirigiri5055 so would you fight for politicians if you're going to fight for US, which is 10000 times worse than Filipino government. I think I don't need to explain why

  • @theunclave6558
    @theunclave6558 4 года назад +60

    This just screams "the country where everyone can be free to pursue happiness"

  • @pathmor
    @pathmor 4 года назад +30

    My great grandmother was in one of the Japanese internment camps. I seriously don’t understand how she maintains more faith in humanity than I do after her own country demonized and harshly mistreated her and so many others.

    • @pathmor
      @pathmor 2 года назад +5

      @La Dolce Vita There are many better things you could've done with your time than comment this.
      Have a good day.

  • @aliciah8250
    @aliciah8250 4 года назад +290

    It’s so scary because I would have gone to a camp 😔

    • @silentsmurf
      @silentsmurf 4 года назад +14

      Alicia Heyer me too 😞

    • @ssrmythic9087
      @ssrmythic9087 4 года назад +9

      Same

    • @theemirofjaffa2266
      @theemirofjaffa2266 4 года назад +3

      But theres nothing Japanese in your name

    • @babyuchiha4526
      @babyuchiha4526 4 года назад +44

      @@theemirofjaffa2266 what does that even mean

    • @mango9602
      @mango9602 4 года назад +6

      Possibly me cause I’m Chinese and people REALLY hated Chinese and they wouldn’t care to pop me in.

  • @scallywag1716
    @scallywag1716 2 года назад +13

    My wife and I visited “camp” Manzanar in California. It is nestled next to Sierra Nevada’s. It was quite eerie as almost all structures were gone save one building, a basketball hoop, and a few monuments. I can’t imagine going through that ordeal. What a travesty to bestow on fellow Americans regardless of national origin.

  • @montiliusbeatty9831
    @montiliusbeatty9831 3 года назад +19

    I was a caretaker at a jodo shinzu buddhist church. Many of the older japanese told me about their experiences in these camps. They lost all of their property: houses, ranches etc.

  • @ahnaafnaaeer1882
    @ahnaafnaaeer1882 4 года назад +61

    Thank you ted ed for sharing these heart moving stories for helping us realize the plight of different people in our history. This helps us to unite and stand for peace. Couldn't have done it without you.

  • @ethannorman7537
    @ethannorman7537 4 года назад +77

    So scary that I never knew this atrocity!

    • @forshigity5000
      @forshigity5000 4 года назад +3

      Niihau incident

    • @amg1334
      @amg1334 4 года назад

      MMM *atrocity

    • @spades1018
      @spades1018 4 года назад

      anaya How was that an atrocity

    • @spades1018
      @spades1018 4 года назад

      anaya Literally as simple as a Japanese pilot crash landing, getting captured by some locals, escaping capture with the help of some locals of Japanese descent, and then getting killed.

    • @spades1018
      @spades1018 4 года назад

      anaya What’s more, the people helping the pilot didn’t even get charged with treason or anything.

  • @graceyang9022
    @graceyang9022 4 года назад +15

    I have to say, the plant being carried throughout the video is honestly quite beautiful imagery/symbolism.

  • @neotheone5559
    @neotheone5559 2 года назад +300

    Americans: "OMG Germany had concentration camps!"
    Also Americans: (puts American Japanese in incarceration camps)

    • @kthevsamig4958
      @kthevsamig4958 2 года назад +9

      So did every other country what’s your point?

    • @punt460
      @punt460 2 года назад +24

      Fun fact the British made concentration camps Japanese ww2 war crime go unknown German and Italian camps during ww2 and ww1 go, unnoticed victims, the Japanese made themselves victims the problem here is blaming Japan or the America is leaving voices unheard people suffer for humans dignity.

    • @communityadmin6505
      @communityadmin6505 2 года назад +1

      Did they fight because of the camps? Your comment does not make sense. And America needed to do it so that they can be sage

    • @neotheone5559
      @neotheone5559 2 года назад +27

      I like how no one is getting the joke. Everyone blames Germany for camps but no one knows about the others until recently. Thats the joke guys :/
      Edit: except Kenneth. Nice fact bro

    • @neotheone5559
      @neotheone5559 2 года назад +3

      @@communityadmin6505 did they though?

  • @theassaulters2869
    @theassaulters2869 4 года назад +81

    Congratulations Ted ed having 10 million subscribers.

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 4 года назад +121

    "Let me tell you a story in the form of a dream. I don't know why I have to tell it, but I know what it means. Close your eyes, just picture the scene as I paint it for you ..."
    Mike Shinoda (the rapper from Linkin Park) made a beautiful song about this topic called "Kenji"

    • @augustussinclair1626
      @augustussinclair1626 4 года назад +2

      @BC Bob no, chester (lead singer) is
      mike's alive and healthy

    • @riojordan3259
      @riojordan3259 4 года назад

      BC Bob // No that was Chester Bennington, the other front man of Linkin Park

    • @riojordan3259
      @riojordan3259 4 года назад +1

      xD was looking for this comment - for anyone having trouble finding it Mike released it under his side project name ‘Fort Minor’

  • @cassieevictoria
    @cassieevictoria 4 года назад +33

    A similar thing happened in Canada too. A few of my Japanese friends had grandparents who were moved to Japanese internment camps during WWII. However, we learned about this in sixth grade, and I feel like in the United States, these types of events are not commonly learned about in school :(

    • @jamesfletcher5906
      @jamesfletcher5906 2 года назад +1

      @@Paonporteur I really don't think its a stain. Look at what was happening in Japan, Germany and Russia at the time. In comparison to the time period, this really wasn't that bad.

    • @zaid1169
      @zaid1169 Год назад +2

      @@jamesfletcher5906 dont try to justify it, it wont clear up untied states reputation just because other country at the times did it worse you aint innocent if you still do almost the same thing as the other does just because its a little bit "different".

    • @jamesfletcher5906
      @jamesfletcher5906 Год назад

      @@zaid1169 The guy called it a stain, that means worse than the rest. America at the time were not worse than the rest. Maybe it could have been handled differently, but people act like it was "America's concentration camp" it really was not

    • @Stickman_Productions
      @Stickman_Productions Год назад

      We do learn about it. There was a book about it that the teacher read to class.

    • @Stickman_Productions
      @Stickman_Productions Год назад

      It was terrifying because they didn't.allow them anywhere and they out up signs on the libraries to go to there

  • @mitsoko3044
    @mitsoko3044 3 года назад +16

    It’s scary that it took me 14 years to learn about this in 8th grade.

    • @biya.self2355
      @biya.self2355 3 года назад

      same😓

    • @s.a928
      @s.a928 3 года назад +2

      because ur gooo gooo gaga brain wouldn't understand it if you were younger

    • @merge9585
      @merge9585 3 года назад

      I first read about it in first grade, in our small collection of books. It confused me so I assumed it had to do with things I would learn later. Never learned about it in history class.

    • @amysteriousstranger1221
      @amysteriousstranger1221 2 года назад

      Ted Ed and Extra History has taught me more about history than most of my history classes

    • @scholarssolutions6735
      @scholarssolutions6735 Месяц назад

      At least you learned about it. My school mentioned it once, briefly, in a textbook and then spent the rest of our WW2 unit on how "integral" the USA was to WW2. Funnily enough, if you look at surveys from that time period, most people overwhelmingly attributed the defeat of the Axis powers to the USSR and not the USA.

  • @lilithslittlemoon
    @lilithslittlemoon 4 года назад +59

    THANK YOU FOR DOING THIS oh my god. My mom was born in the Poston Camps and just finished a documentary about the impact of it on generations after. This is so important.

  • @Marcus-wv6wm
    @Marcus-wv6wm 4 года назад +201

    Happened in Canada too :(

    • @LuinTathren
      @LuinTathren 4 года назад +42

      I didn't know that. Thanks for saying this. I'll have to do some research about it.

    • @Rwircea
      @Rwircea 4 года назад +30

      @fgrdg duifghj Detention of Canadians of japanese origin. I read a book about it years ago, "A Child In Prison Camp", by Shizuye Takashima. It is a short and heartbreaking book, but a must-read to learn about this darker and rarely spoken-of part of canadian history.

    • @thiagobezerra5772
      @thiagobezerra5772 4 года назад +8

      In Brazil it happened too!

    • @italiansoldierfromww2460
      @italiansoldierfromww2460 4 года назад +5

      It's hard to imagine it happened in California but gee I never assumed Canada would do it

    • @tadokoropilled
      @tadokoropilled 4 года назад +2

      i studied it in class, it's sad, really.

  • @christianvikelgaardliebst9768
    @christianvikelgaardliebst9768 2 года назад +38

    As a Dane, seeing how the public and officials treat people of middle eastern backgrounds, after the War on Terrorism started, really shows how we haven’t learned from history. No matter how many times it may repeat itself

    • @guzelataroach4450
      @guzelataroach4450 18 дней назад

      Hvorfor? Hundretusenvis av ulovlige innvandrere , de fleste men mellom 20 - 30 år, som kommer for å utnytte velferdssystemet, drepe, voldta???

  • @PinkyJapan
    @PinkyJapan 2 года назад +14

    I teach English in Japan and will be showing this video to my students. Even my 32 year old Japanese husband didn’t know that Japanese Americans were held in concentration camps until I told him. He was shocked.

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable 2 года назад +6

      I take him you also showed the atrocities of the Imperial Japanese military towards surrendered Americans and Chinese civilians too? You gotta show both sides during any history session.

    • @communityadmin6505
      @communityadmin6505 2 года назад +7

      You should teach them how the Japanese treated American pows as well then.

    • @PinkyJapan
      @PinkyJapan 2 года назад +6

      @@communityadmin6505There is an enormous difference between how enemy soldiers and innocent civilians should be treated during war.

    • @keithkoganeislife3144
      @keithkoganeislife3144 Год назад +2

      @@PinkyJapan Unit 731, where the Japanese army conducted horrendous experiments on civilians. Such as infecting them with frost-bite, cholera, and various STDs. Plus conducting vivisections on them while they were still conscious and making prisoners walk out into the freezing cold dosed in freezing water to measure how long it took them to freeze to death.

  • @herr_rudolf
    @herr_rudolf 4 года назад +671

    Name them without euphemisms: concentration camps.

    • @bjuny6481
      @bjuny6481 4 года назад +36

      Do you know what a concentration camp is?

    • @herr_rudolf
      @herr_rudolf 4 года назад +219

      @@bjuny6481 Yes, facilities where innocent people, mainly large groups, are imprisoned without a trial because of their ethnicity, ideology or unjustified prosecution.

    • @lilithslittlemoon
      @lilithslittlemoon 4 года назад +21

      THANK YOU 💯

    • @herr_rudolf
      @herr_rudolf 4 года назад +44

      @@rjlooker Ja, sicher, ich bin ein Schwul und du bist ja ein Erwachsene.
      People died in this camps for no justified reason. I know there were German camps, and also there were Gulags, Chinese concentration camps, Japanese concentration camps but also US concentration camps. Treating them as something special is just hypocrisy at its best. Victims of these concentration camps must be remembered without euphemisms.

    • @Th3Sh1n1gam1
      @Th3Sh1n1gam1 4 года назад +16

      The definition of concentration camps is much more baggaged than internment camps. Concentration camps would imply a form of genocide alongside mass incarceration.

  • @ernestoglez6725
    @ernestoglez6725 4 года назад +72

    Make a video about La masacre de Tlatelolco (Tlatelolco's massacre) México October 2 1968, a week before the Olympic's inauguration

  • @codyshi4743
    @codyshi4743 Год назад +13

    The first time, when I heard about the Japanese internment camp was from a book, “Baseball Saved Us”. After finished reading it as an kid, I’ve always wanted to know more about what the camp was like, what those Japanese Americans had to go through, and why the government would want to go through such great length to do this thing towards Americans of Japanese decent.
    This video really explains more and explains very well, in why they would such a thing. And the Video about the Akunes Brother also explains it very well.
    After knowing more about this thing, I’ve always worry, what if the US went to war with another none white nation? Would they want to do the same horrible thing towards their own citizens, who are of the same ethnicity as their enemy country?

  • @pinemeadowshobbyfarmafruga8319
    @pinemeadowshobbyfarmafruga8319 2 месяца назад

    Had an awesome interview with this exceptional survivor of the INTERNMENT CAMPS: ruclips.net/video/wWAlfdyjahM/видео.html

  • @Kokosnuss
    @Kokosnuss 4 года назад +49

    This makes me incredibly sad.

  • @astronautbehera7621
    @astronautbehera7621 4 года назад +15

    Wow, I had no idea about this. Thank you TED-ED for such a beautiful, detailed and logical explanation.

  • @carvel8874
    @carvel8874 4 года назад +11

    I find it so baffling that I never learned this in school. Thank you for this educational video

    • @dhockedy1273
      @dhockedy1273 Год назад

      why would you the US never do anything wrong if you think otherwise it just means you havent swallowed enough propaganda

  • @morganmarsh1276
    @morganmarsh1276 4 года назад +7

    I liked how the pictures moved. It was a satisfying art style but also helped you visualize that these were living, breathing people and actual events. I just thought that was cool.

  • @pranjalshilkar8329
    @pranjalshilkar8329 4 года назад +6

    You put so much effort in this. I wish more people would see it.

  • @somewiseguy7245
    @somewiseguy7245 4 года назад +8

    Congrats on 10 million subscribers.It is way overdue.Keep up the amaz8ng work guys😊

  • @justyouraveragegamer8733
    @justyouraveragegamer8733 4 года назад +24

    I can’t believe her teacher would say something like that to her

  • @sophiatroetel8389
    @sophiatroetel8389 4 года назад +8

    this video does a good job explaining the history and the basis of the camps, but I don’t think people realize how bad the conditions were. In the camps further north, there was no heat in the barracks so it was freezing cold at night; pregnant women got very little medical attention; everyone showered publicly facing each other and guards. Feel free to read more about this subject. (I recommend “Farewell to Manzanar”)

  • @aquapenguin9697
    @aquapenguin9697 4 года назад +16

    Sadly...this also happened in Canada...

  • @ItsBeenTooLong
    @ItsBeenTooLong 4 года назад +34

    You got to listen to Kenji by Fort Minor! That’s how I learned about the internment camps, because for some reason public school history book’s didn’t have it. 🤔🤔🤔

    • @aleasia2269
      @aleasia2269 4 года назад +8

      Monté Zæ cause America likes hiding it’s dark past. I knew the country was janky but when is started studying history I realize this place is really tore up from the floor up and the sad part is people don’t want to acknowledge it or they assume you hate it cause you point out the bad things but ,how are you supposed to have a good future if you don’t acknowledge and learn from the the past

    • @bigbruhenergygobrr
      @bigbruhenergygobrr 4 года назад +1

      Yesss i was thinking abt that song too!

    • @grovetender4713
      @grovetender4713 4 года назад +1

      As an American, I appreciate that our dark past is being taught. If we don’t learn about the past, then we are doomed to repeat it.

  • @madchencraig5395
    @madchencraig5395 4 года назад +2

    That was only 5 minutes but it felt like 30. I love the way this channel tells stories

  • @therebex23
    @therebex23 4 года назад +10

    Let's not forget that this happened in Canada too; to this day it is not often talked about or taught in school (it is brushed over a few times but not to the extent that we actually pushed Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry out of their homes, cities...) but, education is key to righting past wrongs and creating a better present and future. In Canada, we embrace the "mosaic" of cultures that came together to create our country...but we need to acknowledge the wrongs of the past to make everyone who lives here feel like they are home.

  • @phoenixshadow6633
    @phoenixshadow6633 4 года назад +70

    I would also assume that Yellow Peril sentiments that were prominent in the 19th and 20th centuries would have a hand in causing the distrust in Japanese Americans. America did peddle for years that the East Asian cultures were unassimilable in the West. It's easier to harm people when you convince they were "the Other" rather than your own.

    • @andywest8363
      @andywest8363 2 года назад +2

      Tell that to the people of Nanking.

    • @rafangille
      @rafangille 2 года назад +3

      @@andywest8363 these people had nothing to do with the war crimes of the japanese empire ?

  • @marthedevries4655
    @marthedevries4655 4 года назад +13

    This is a whole new view on the war i never knew about

  • @robertwatts7894
    @robertwatts7894 4 года назад +11

    I love how in high school we never learn about this in history.

    • @pyroromancer
      @pyroromancer 4 года назад +6

      you weren't paying attention.

    • @damianmorningstar3150
      @damianmorningstar3150 4 года назад

      Because we Asians only make up 5% of the entire US if the population was bigger you would have

    • @danielescobedo9315
      @danielescobedo9315 4 года назад

      PyroRomancer right 😂😂

    • @BronzeSista
      @BronzeSista 4 года назад +2

      now why would they teach you the dark history of America?

    • @rohinim1334
      @rohinim1334 4 года назад

      im learning this in high school rn we have to watch this and take notes

  • @zohy98
    @zohy98 2 года назад +1

    Just wanted to come here and say I absolutely love the animation style! So complementary to to topic of the video, amazing work.

  • @mollietenpenny4093
    @mollietenpenny4093 4 года назад +29

    I remember a book on this by Japanese American author Allan Say.

  • @jonathanlafleche5984
    @jonathanlafleche5984 4 года назад +10

    Just throwing this out there, but Canada also partook in this atrocious act of racism. David Suzuki, a well known Canadian environmentalist, spent some years when he was still young in an internment camp in the BC interior. At the time of his internment, David was a third generation Japanese-Canadian and his family has lived here for four decades.

  • @theodorebugsby3045
    @theodorebugsby3045 4 года назад +1

    Thank you TedEd for these inspiring stories!

  • @extraemail6870
    @extraemail6870 3 года назад +15

    Both my Grandmother and Grandfather were interned. My grandmother was born in one of the concentration camps. My grandfather was a toddler while he was imprisoned. One of the camps, Tule Lake was for the "no-no" people. Tule Lake was a brutal maximum security camp. I call them concentration camps because they were. Death camps are what you call places such as Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Majdanek.

  • @finnlewis2528
    @finnlewis2528 4 года назад +10

    Ted-Ed has a video on the Japanese Interment Camps, but no video on Unit 731
    really makes you think

    • @mrpug1037
      @mrpug1037 4 года назад +4

      Yeah... true

    • @finnlewis2528
      @finnlewis2528 4 года назад +2

      @@mrpug1037 so what brings you here from the Based and Redpilled Department

    • @btomimatsucunard
      @btomimatsucunard 4 года назад +5

      Wow... a person trying to justify the confinement of American citizens because of what a foreign nation did. Wow.. so original...

    • @finnlewis2528
      @finnlewis2528 4 года назад +2

      @@btomimatsucunard look up the Niihau Incident and then get back to me weeb also, where would you prefer to be in an interment camp or Unit 731

    • @btomimatsucunard
      @btomimatsucunard 3 года назад +1

      @@finnlewis2528 The camps were on the US mainland, not Hawaii tho they had their own system during the war. Regardless there is no justifying this. This is locking up American citizens without due process just because of ethnic fears and prejudices that came to a head in wartime. Period, regardless of what Japan did, this act is about what the US did to their own citizens based on their ethnic heritage. The fact that you are trying to justify it speaks volumes towards your own morality.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz 4 года назад +148

    What is all this whataboutism in the comments not every video or channel has to talk about every event ever, just to cover the one that makes you feel uncomfortable. This is an American channel so amazingly they focus on things that happened in America.

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz 4 года назад +39

      @@randomdude9135 come on you don't even belive this yourself. Propoganda just because they talked about an event that happened. By your own standard there is not a school, even university on earth that can call themselves education, as they don't teach every single event ever, a Geography course does not talk about every city in the world or every mountain so therefore it isn't education, please...
      Also how is this one sided reporting, you don't report history, this is historical fact, if it upsets you and you don't like it, that does not make it propoganda.

    • @marcosluna7792
      @marcosluna7792 4 года назад +8

      I thought TED was international.

    • @godzillavkk
      @godzillavkk 4 года назад +2

      Are you educated? I think not.

    • @Madhattersinjeans
      @Madhattersinjeans 4 года назад +2

      They did neglect to mention all the other things occuring at this time.The paranoia and simple ignorance of what the populations where doing to their own civilians.
      It is a biased account, however with ww2 it would be difficult to make a comprehensive video about this event and give a good background with something that upended lives all across the globe.

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz 4 года назад +3

      @@Madhattersinjeans just to add the channel is aimed at teaching children, giving every aspect as you said would be hard especially in a short content format.

  • @tanvi6952
    @tanvi6952 4 года назад +3

    Oh god we learned about these in 4th grade, it was depressing but informational and I’m kind of glad we learned it that early on

  • @fxlxp
    @fxlxp 4 года назад +2

    Wow I had no idea this happened. Thank you TedEd

  • @nickc3657
    @nickc3657 4 года назад +17

    It’s absurd to think this isn’t happening, again, right now

    • @guynumber3100
      @guynumber3100 4 года назад +7

      It almost did after 9/11. Alot of people where calling for peoples of the middle East to be put in camps. Thank God Bush said no.

  • @jamaelwilliams8677
    @jamaelwilliams8677 4 года назад +17

    Just another example of how racism and paranoia destroy entire factions Families and lives

  • @bn9611
    @bn9611 4 года назад +10

    kinda wished that there was an actual picture of her at the end of the video. it would definitely help to encourage some kind of connection to a human face rather than cartoon

    • @zoro.7
      @zoro.7 3 года назад +4

      You can search her name

    • @bn9611
      @bn9611 3 года назад

      @@zoro.7 ....that's not the point

  • @jamiel9815
    @jamiel9815 4 года назад +4

    So sad. Surprised i learned about this today instead of my history class many years ago.

  • @kamini858
    @kamini858 4 года назад +26

    Yet another fine piece of history presented beautifully by Ted ed.
    I pretty much don't like history taught at our school but the history by Ted ed is interesting and amusing at the same time being educational.
    Wish you a good luck to soon reach that 100 million sub mark.

  • @thisoldbelair
    @thisoldbelair 2 года назад +3

    I grew up in Washington and lived in southern Idaho for a few years. It’s weird to hear familiar town names like Puyallup associated with such atrocities. With that in mind, there’s no reason for anyone currently living to feel accountable for this history, because we aren’t. We can, however, learn from it and prevent it from ever happening again. In that way, we can be responsible.

  • @jackmion
    @jackmion 3 года назад +1

    We have to learn from history and work towards changes. We are lucky that we can discuss it here and learn this.

  • @writtenbykatiee
    @writtenbykatiee Год назад

    This is very important information for my GATE project. Thank you for the video. It helps a lot.

  • @tzwacdastag8223
    @tzwacdastag8223 4 года назад +53

    Love the selfless mission of TED Organisation

  • @marlonmoncrieffe0728
    @marlonmoncrieffe0728 4 года назад +9

    'Snow Falling on Cedars' (1999) is one my all-time favorite movies.
    There is a beautiful montage in the film's middle where Japanese families are sent to Manzanar internment camp.
    P.S. 'Come See the Paradise' (1991) is an underrated movie about this same dark subject.
    P.P.S. Credit to Colorado governor, Ralph Lawrence Carr, the only elected official to denounce Japanese internment. He unfortunately lost his job for his integrity.

  • @sl3521
    @sl3521 3 года назад

    People with really good voices narrate in TED-Ed so I loveeee❤ this channel!

  • @habib.h5921
    @habib.h5921 4 года назад +1

    The animation style is out of this world 😢😍

  • @barrymccaulkiner7092
    @barrymccaulkiner7092 4 года назад +24

    George Takei knows all about this.

  • @MxNEWCASTLE
    @MxNEWCASTLE 2 года назад +3

    I live in Puyallup Washington. I'm so happy to say that Camp Harmony is now the fair grounds it always should have been. There's a memorial plaque there today as well.
    But even more impactful than the historical site to me is the story, the people that lay behind it. My mother told me as a child what happened there and it really had an effect on me. The fact that my town was home to such hate still stings, and it always will. But it motivated me to make a difference, to not tolerate racism, discrimination, or oppression. It helped me to understand the struggles of my Japanese American family members.
    Japanese people are always welcome here, as equals and friends. Racism, however, has no place.

  • @jackukay
    @jackukay 3 года назад +1

    Never learned any of this in school! Thanks for sharing!

  • @user02406
    @user02406 2 года назад +7

    it absolutely breaks my heart to think of the older people who didn't have a home to go back to and because homeless with 25$ as the only money they had. and not to forget about the racial discrimination minorities had to face, especially the japanese after the war.

  • @katepetzoldt1726
    @katepetzoldt1726 3 года назад +5

    I read a book about this when I was younger. Red Berries, White Clouds, Blue Skies. I recommend it, though it's written for middle schoolers, it's still an interesting read.

  • @lexieoddo
    @lexieoddo Год назад +3

    I had to take notes for school on this video. We only had to take 5, but I took 20 because this is so interesting.

  • @sad.3x3
    @sad.3x3 4 года назад +1

    HOW HAVE I NEVER HEARD ABOUT THIS?!

  • @praveenas4675
    @praveenas4675 4 года назад +1

    CONGRATS ON 10 MILLION🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @theorangedinosaur4098
    @theorangedinosaur4098 4 года назад +5

    It's interesting to learn about stuff like this. Most people talk about the hollucosts(just as bad.) But this is something less people talk about, and is new to me.

  • @nixonooi8276
    @nixonooi8276 4 года назад +6

    When she went college I was Damn proud

  • @heelvine
    @heelvine 4 года назад

    CONGRATS ON 10 MIL 🎉

  • @kausamsalam8543
    @kausamsalam8543 2 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for this insight.

  • @WWTormentor
    @WWTormentor 2 года назад +6

    We can’t blame the current generation for the mistakes and atrocities of the past generations. But we must learn from those experiences and educate so we don’t repeat the same actions.

  • @heorgegarrison5554
    @heorgegarrison5554 4 года назад +3

    I never knew this happened, and people should know, people NEED to know about these things

  • @anatoyoda1243
    @anatoyoda1243 9 месяцев назад +2

    Brazil also had incarceration camps for Japanese Brazilian individuals and families at that time. My great grandfather was sent to one of those camps in the Amazon region and his family never recovered from that, which led to my great grandmother taking her own life, maybe out of deep sadness and shame.

    • @gametri-eq6lj
      @gametri-eq6lj 3 месяца назад

      nothing compared to Japanese colonialism in Indonesia,China,Philippines,Korea,Malaysia,Burma,India unit 731 being an example

  • @justzephan2267
    @justzephan2267 4 года назад +5

    This is pretty similar to my Grandpa he used to have PTSD from the camps