Compare And Contrast Farewell To Manzanar

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Pages: 2

Thesis: Internment camps in America that housed Japanese and Japanese- Americans after Pearl Harbor until the end of World War 2 had many similarities, but also many differences to Polish extermination or death camps that housed Jews, and other frowned upon religions during World War 2.
In the camps where Japanese and Japanese-Americans were held during this time were similar in a few ways to Polish death camps. In both camps, families that were taken mostly stayed together. In the book, Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki, the author wrote that their bus was “full of Wakatsukis" (Wakatsuki, 21). The Wakatsuki family was together on the bus, on their way to the Internment camp. Furthermore, the newspaper article titled Holocaust survivor
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In the article, Poland: Living with Auschwitz, the author, Wojciech Kosc, quoted Merka Szewach, “...my whole family was burnt…” (Kosc, 1). In death camps, hence their name, they kill people. However, the case was different for interned people. In the book Farewell to Manzanar, by Jeanne Wakatsuki, the author wrote, “Some of the older folks resisted leaving right up to the end and had to have their bags packed for them and be physically lifted and shoved onto the buses. When our day finally arrived, in early October, there were maybe 2,000 people still living out there, waiting their turn and hoping it wouldn't come” (Wakatsuki, 127). In contrast to the prisoners in the death camps, the internees didn’t want to leave. They stayed until the last possible second, when they were forced out. There are more significant differences than similarities between extermination camps and internment camps.

Restate Thesis: Internment camps where Japanese and Japanese- Americans were held after Pearl Harbor had many similarities, but more significant differences to Polish extermination or death camps that housed Jews during