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How the Quakers Opposed the Detainment of japanese Americans during WWII
The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), the co-beneficiary of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1947, was established in Philadelphia by … the basic support the AFSC gave—such as shelter and food supplies—to people impacted by the war and its opposition to the detainment of japanese-Americans in concentration camps in the US following the bombing of Pearl Harbor showed that the organization was indifferent to the type of prejudices and biases motivating ……
References.
Franklin, S. (2020). American Friends Service Committee. Retrieved from https://www.mtsu.edu/first-amendment/article/1167/american-friends-service-committee " target="_blank" REL="NOFOLLOW">
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… of the other religious groups such as the Mennonites and Brethren to manage the governmentally settled Civilian Public Service (CPS) arrangement of work camps for faithful dissenters (Ingles, 1992). The AFSC resettled European outcasts in the United States, and by building up a regional office in San … European outcasts in the United States, and by building up a regional office in San Francisco the organization also opposed the US government’s japanese-American internment policy and moved more than 4,000 japanese-American understudies from the internment camps (Ingles, 1992). In 1947, after another round of taking care of war victims in Germany and based on the quality of the organization’s ……
References
Franklin, S. (2020). American Friends Service Committee. Retrieved from https://www.mtsu.edu/first-amendment/article/1167/american-friends-service-committee " target="_blank" REL="NOFOLLOW">
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… constructions (Obasogie 176).
One example of both the pervasiveness and the ridiculousness of racism cited by Obasogie is that which was fostered against japanese-Americans during World War II. Before the attacks on Pearl Harbor, prejudice against Asian Americans was common. However, the war crystalized specifically anti-japanese sentiments and created a constellation of prejudices specifically inflicted against japanese Americans. “This singular act radically deepened Americans’ pejorative sentiments toward japanese people, leading to them being perceived as a distinct group with intrinsic tendencies toward treachery and duplicity” (Obasogie 12). Once such prejudices take … take root, they are very difficult to eradicate, and these prejudices still linger to this very day. During World War II, prejudice against japanese Americans resulted in individuals of japanese ancestry, including children, being detained in internment camps, one of the darkest chapters of recent American history.
According to anthropologists, the physical differences between races are actually……
Works Cited
Obasogie, Osagie. Blinded by Sight: Seeing Race Through the Eyes of the Blind. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2014.
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