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  1. There were 20,881 Japanese placed in internment camps and road camps in British Columbia, and prisoner-of-war camps in Ontario. Families were also sent as forced labourers to farms throughout the prairies. Three quarters of them were already citizens in Canada. A parallel situation occurred in the United States, the Japanese American internment.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Canadians
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Canadians
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    Homes and possessions belonging to Japanese-Canadians were seized and sold. Some Japanese-Canadians — deemed threats to national security — were forced into internment camps. In 1988 the federal government apologized for this historical wrong. Now, a new project will explore and highlight the human and cultural costs of this forced dispossession.
    For a plain-language summary, see Internment of Japanese Canadians (Plain-Language Summary). A family of Japanese Canadians being relocated in British Columbia, 1942. These events are popularly known as the Japanese Canadian internment.
    From 1942 to 1949, Canada forcibly relocated and incarcerated over 22,000 Japanese Canadians —comprising over 90% of the total Japanese Canadian population—from British Columbia in the name of "national security". The majority were Canadian citizens by birth and were targeted based on their ancestry.
    However, various scholars and activists have challenged the notion that Japanese Canadians were interned during the Second World War . Under international law, internment refers to the detention of enemy aliens. But about 77 per cent of the Japanese Canadians involved were British subjects, and 60 per cent were born in Canada.
  3. Internment of Japanese Canadians | The Canadian Encyclopedia

  4. Internment of Japanese Canadians - Wikipedia

  5. Internment of Japanese Canadians (Plain-Language Summary)