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Widespread internment was authorized on March 4, 1942, with order-in-council 1665 passed under the Defence of Canada Regulations of the War Measures Act, which gave the federal government the power to intern all "persons of Japanese racial origin." A 100-mile (160 km) wide strip along the Pacific coast was deemed " ...
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Beginning in early 1942, the Canadian government detained and dispossessed more than 90 per cent of Japanese Canadians, some 21000 people, living in British ...
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Feb 15, 2017 · Under international law, internment refers to the detention of enemy aliens. But about 77 per cent of the Japanese Canadians involved were ...
May 19, 2017 · It was only on April 1, 1949 that Japanese Canadians were again allowed to move freely across Canada. Before that date, the community had begun ...
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When the war concluded in 1945, the federal government began to offer internees the choice of deportation to Japan or relocation east of the Rocky Mountains.
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Aug 4, 2017 · The eventual dispossession, internment, incarceration, exile, and prohibitions on returning to British Columbia were all products of law: Orders ...
Finally, after 7 years of internment, in 1949, Japanese Canadians were granted the right to vote, live wherever they wanted, and were free to come and go as ...
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Dec 18, 2017 · The actual answer is none; even if there was a Constitution in 1942 it would have been largely ruled void for all intents and purpose by The War ...
Oct 3, 2017 · This policy, which prohibited Japanese Canadians from returning to the protected zone was designed to encourage the assimilation of Japanese ...
Jun 25, 2020 · After the war, BC legislators demanded that Japanese Canadians be sent to Japan, a country most had never seen, or dispersed across the country.