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Sunday, February 19, 2012

Twenty-Three Things You May Not Have Known About the Japanese-American Internment « Student Activism

Twenty-Three Things You May Not Have Known About the Japanese-American Internment « Student Activism:

Twenty-Three Things You May Not Have Known About the Japanese-American Internment

Today is the 70th anniversary of #EO9066, the FDR executive order that authorized Japanese deportation from the West Coast during WWII.

— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) February 19, 2012

I just posted a string of tweets, including the one above, to commemorate the 70th anniversary of Executive Order 9066. EO 9066, signed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, authorized the exclusion of Japanese Americans from large portions of the United States solely on the basis of their ethnicity. It led almost immediately to seizure of property, ethnic curfews, and — on May 3, 1942 — the authorization of the establishment of internment camps to house those who would be relocated from exclusion zones.

  • 70 years ago today FDR #EO9066 created the Japanese-American internment policy. 120,000 people, 2/3 of them citizens, were imprisoned.