Recent Event Highlights: Japanese American Internment Camps, 1942-1946, Japanese Internment Camps in WWII, Japanese Internment Camps, American-Japanese Internment Camp.wmv, Japanese Internment Camps, Naive Persepective: A Japanese Internment Story- Part 2, and 35 more...
Created by dipity on Apr 19, 2010
Last updated: 11/11/10 at 08:42 PM
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This interview was produced for the American History and Geography course A&HW 4038 taught by Prof. Shuttleworth. It is an oral history project meant to be used as a resource in a lesson on WWII.
A video I did for Mr. Yourman's AP US History class. This is my first video, and I think it came out pretty decent. Port of Los Angeles High School, San Pedro California
My video project for World History. Don't be too hard on me this was my first video that i edited, the transtions are kinda rough and the audio stops abruptly but other than that its alright, right ? ENJOOOOOY! :D
en.wikipedia.org
Another school project video, hope u like it
Local San Diego born and raised, Japanese Internment survivor Ruth Voorhies tells her experience during World War 2 when her family was placed in the Poston Arizona Japanese Internment camp. The experience was a tragic event that never should have happened and was a violation of American rights. It had been argued in the 1970-80s that the Japanese internment camps were concentration camps. However, we show that the camps were in no way similar to concentration camps and that the unfortunate experience was based on what you make of the situation. There are 3 parts....
Local San Diego born and raised, Japanese Internment survivor Ruth Voorhies tells her experience during World War 2 when her family was placed in the Poston Arizona Japanese Internment camp. The experience was a tragic event that never should have happened and was a violation of American rights. It had been argued in the 1970-80s that the Japanese internment camps were concentration camps. However, we show that the camps were in no way similar to concentration camps and that the unfortunate experience was based on what you make of the situation. There are 3 parts....
CHARLEEN YSON / ETHS 220-01 / G. YOO
This is a video that one of my honors US history students (Brittany Bailey) created for her project on World War II. It covers Executive Order 9066, which authorized the removal of Japanese Americans from the west coast. Excellent work.
WEBSITE: www.teachertube.com Student Project reviewing the chapter studying Japanese Internment Camps
WEBSITE: www.teachertube.com Student Project reviewing the chapter studying Japanese Internment Camps
Part One: Alyssa Caampued Interviews a Japanese American Camp Survivor.
Part Two: Alyssa Caampued interviews a Japanese American Internment Camp Survivor.
From 7-27-09 Howard gives George Takei a playful sample of what his upcoming musical about the Japanese-American Internment Camps might sound like. GET SIRIUS RADIO NOW!!
Project about the Internment camps.
This is a movie I made for a history project on Japanese Internment in Canada. Song - Kiss the Rain by Yiruma Pictures from google images Video clips from youtube Thanks! Enjoy!
A video I made for history class about Japanese Internment. The song is Kenji by Fort Minor Works Cited "A | More | Perfect | Union." National Museum of American History. Smithsonian. 26 May 2009 americanhistory.si.edu Digital Video Collection. InfOhio. 27 May 2009 mediast.infohio.org Easton, Stanley E., and Lucien Ellington. "Japanese Americans - Overview, History, Modern era, Migration to Hawaii and America, Efforts to ban Japanese immigration." Countries and Their Cultures. 2008. 23 May 2009 www.everyculture.com Fort Minor. Kenji. Rising Tied. Warner Bros. Records, 2005. Gantt-Wright, Iantha. "Asian Americans and the National Park System: An Experience of Joy and Pain." The Brown Quarterly Vol. 1, no.3 (12 July 1997). Speidel, Jennifer. "After Internment: Seattles Debate Over Japanese Americans' Right to Return Home." Seattle Civil Rights and Labor Project. 01 Apr. 2007. University of Washington. 27 May 2009 depts.washington.edu Wilson, Grace L. "The History of Japanese Immigration." The Brown Quarterly Vol. 3, no. 4 (28 May 2000).
japanese internment camps
This is a documentary included in the film "come see the paradise" it explains what really happened during the time of the internment camps.
This is a documentary included in the film "come see the paradise" it explains what really happened during the time of the internment camps.
This is a documentary included in the film "come see the paradise" it explains what really happened during the time of the internment camps.
This is a documentary included in the film "come see the paradise" it explains what really happened during the time of the internment camps.
This is a documentary included in the film "come see the paradise" it explains what really happened during the time of the internment camps.
This is a documentary included in the film "come see the paradise" it explains what really happened during the time of the internment camps.
This video was prepared for the WRIT 340 class at the University of Southern California. It is for educational purposes only and is covered by the Fair Use doctrine.
Slideshow about Japanese Internment Camps for a History Project had 2 change the song 4 youtube. the song thats supposed to go with it is Kenji by Fort Minor cause it goes perfectly with the song, o well here it is
stopped at a memorial at Manzanar Japanese internment camp from WWII. At the outbreak of WWII the Gov't moved all Japanese Americans to prison camps like this one across the country.
A short film distributed by the US government during World War Two to explain why Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals living on the West Coast were relocated to internment camps away from the coast.Posted by David Burns for the Fasttrack American History Project. Teachers: For full screen use, choose the "watch in high quality" option or download the free MPEG2 file for this video from the online Prelinger Archive.
Yamamoto discusses an encounter with camp victim.
Tule Lake Internment Camp Two months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan on December 7,1941, Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order No. 9066, a proclamation that ultimately consigned 110000 Japanese Americans to ten internment camps scattered throughout the United States. Tule Lake was the largest of the internment camps with a peak population of 18789 persons of Japanese descent. Tule Lake was the only camp turned into a high-security segregation center, ruled by martial law and occupied by the United States Army. Stripped of their constitutional rights, Japanese American men, women and children were allowed one trunk per person and sent to camps around the country - leaving behind their homes, businesses and personal belongings built over a lifetime. Tule Lake Prisoner of War Camp Just a few miles north of the ancient lava flows of Lava Beds National Monument - nestled next to a high bluff -- lies a group of buildings weathered by more than sixty-years of extreme temperatures and the dry dust-filled winds of the Modoc Plateau. These rustic buildings, scattered like unwanted tumbleweeds in the wind, once housed Japanese American internees, and both Italian and German prisoners-of-war. The Tule Lake Branch Prisoner of War Camp (Camp Tulelake) was originally used as a Civilian Conservation Corps camp in the 1930's. (This camp should not be confused with the nearby Tule Lake War Relocation Center.) The camp, built between 1935 and 1938, contained ...
A Midwood High School Production
WWII history channel type video for Ms. Brison's US II class. Nora, Jackie, and Caitlin
school project
A collection of audio and visual clips during WWII and the Japanese Internment Camps. I made this just for fun for one of my classes. These clips range from random video clips, propaganda, and old documentaries of the time during the Japanese Internment Camps. A good collection could be found at archive.org. Note: These films do not show the entire picture of Japanese Internment Camps, nor does it capture the despair and turmoil of the Japanese people. Since some of these clips were taken from propaganda films, notice the word choice from narrator and even music. Also note that some films were mixed with other narrator voices that better described the situation.
Internment camp of the unwelcome "japs"
Japanese internment camps during WWII.
During WW2 in America
Another History Project for school on the Japanese Internement camps that occured during WWII, just after Pearl Harbour.
This is a project i had to do for History. Pretty self-explanatory. The song was something from sounddogs.com that i made into a loop. If you want it for something download this video as an mp3.. see my video on downloading youtube videos.
A documentary about the Japanese American Internment Camp. Includes interviews, pictures and textual information as well as a soundtrack by Elliott Smith.
During World War II Japanese Americans were rounded up and down the West Coast and shipped to internment camps. One was the famous racetrack Tanforan in San Bruno. Home of the famous racehorse Seabiscuit
This is a school project I did on Japanese Internment Camps. I used the song Kenji by Fort Minor.
Download at: ehistory.osu.edu for a larger version. A video about Japanese internment during World War II. Our democracy was forged in a revolution, fought by revolutionaries who saw injustice & wanted to improve their society. I believe that if our democracy is to remain viable, social criticism must remain an essential part of our nation's education. I strongly criticize the way our nation treated its Japanese-American citizens during the Second World War, & the way I make my point is to use the most palpable evidence of the innocence of those citizens they interned. I show pictures of children in my video as a way to contrast the intent of the policy of internment versus the effect of the internment. Whatever any other governments or people did during that horrible war, what we did to our own citizens was wrong. As a citizen, educator, & most importantly, mother living within the United States, I see it as my duty to critique, criticize, & attempt to improve the direction of American society. This video is one way I attempt to reach that end. In my classroom, my goal is to empower students by giving them the knowledge of how their society works, & through this, how to alter its course. I endeavor to teach students about the interconnectedness of the world, that they have a place in it, & that they have the power to direct it. Without knowledge of their position in our democratic society as citizens, students may never realize their ability to direct society. Without ...
These videos are part of my Soc197a; Intro to Asian American Studies. I took interviews of random people at the HUB at Penn State on January 31. The topic is "What is Asian American Studies" Enjoy.
This video was produced by the US Government to explain their decision to forcibly intern thousands of American citizens of Japanese descent. It's an amazing/horrific display of US Government propaganda.
A video made from a public domain film produced by the Immigration and Naturalizaton Service in 1945 of the family internment camp at Crystal City, Texas. This camps was used for the incarceration of German Americans, German Latin Americans, Italian Americans and Italian Latin Americans, as well as Japanese Americans and Japanese Latin Americans. This is an abbreviated version of the original 22 minute video.
This story about Masumi Hayashi first aired March 25, 2004, on "Outlook." It was rebroadcast Dec. 21, 2006, shortly after Congress approved $38 million to presevere WW II internment camps. Our crew enjoyed meeting her, and learning about the history of the camps. So it was with sadness when we recently learned she was the victim of a senseless crime. In August, Hayashi was shot to death in her Cleveland apartment. As a tribute, we thought it would be worthwhile to take a second look at the work of Masumi Hayashi.
history 12 project.

