Internment of Americans of Japanese Descent during WWII
Over 100,000 Japanese Americans were put into "internment camps" during WWII, a crucial yet often overlooked part of US history. We are joined by Madeleine Sugimoto, whose family was sent to Camp Jerome; this segment also features the paintings of her father, Henry Y. Sugimoto, documenting life inside the camps. From "The Broader Implications of War," a series directed and co-produced by Gloria Messer for the Manhattan Neighborhood Network. Host and co-producer: Heather Wokusch.

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American-Japanese Veteran of WWII: Kazuo Fred Yamaguchi

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Remembering Manzanar Documentary

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Colorado Experience: Amache (full length)

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Sarah Paine — Why Japan lost WWII (lecture & interview)

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Minidoka: 80 Years of Unspoken Memories

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George Takei on Life Inside a Japanese Internment Camp During WWII

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How WW2 Made Life A Living Hell For Japanese-Americans (PART 1) | Silent Sacrifice

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Japanese American Internment Camp Survivor

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Dave Tatsuno: Movies and Memories

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Why the US photographed its own WWII concentration camps

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Internment - Time of Remembrance - Marielle Tsukamoto

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Japanese Translators Secretly Helped Win World War II | Full Documentary

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Japanese Internment Camp Survivors Speak Out

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Nothing about the honey badger is normal... and here is why

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The Untold Story: Internment of Japanese Americans in Hawaiʻi - PBS Version (60 min)

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Racism and America’s Concentration Camps | Mas Hashimoto | TEDxMeritAcademy

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This Is Us! Manzanar

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Forgotten Japanese War Diary Returns Home

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Japanese American Internment Documentary

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