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1 http://www.lib.utah.edu/collection s/photo-exhibits/tule-lake.php

2 AAfter the bombing of Pearl Harbor, 66% of Japanese-Americans were imprisoned. DDuring World War II, over 127,000 Japanese-Americans were imprisoned. EEven Japanese-Americans that served the U.S. Army were sent to internment camps. After executive order 9066, Japanese- Americans had only 48 hours to get out of their homes. Picture From: http://nhdhopemikail a.weebly.com/

3  Adults that worked at the camps only got $5 a day.  There were 10 internment camps in the U.S. in remote areas of seven western states.  The largest internment camp was in Tule Lake, CA with a peak population of18,789 people.  Even though over 120,000 people were imprisoned, during all of World War II only 10 people were convicted of spying for Japan.

4  Fred Toyosaburo Korematsu was born January 30, 1919 in Oakland, CA.  Fred died March 30, 2005 in Marin County, CA at the age of 86.  Fred worked on his family's nursery until his family left for the assembly center in 1942.  On May 9, 1942, Fred’s parents and his three brothers left to go to Tanforan Assembly Center.  When his family left, Fred stayed and got minor plastic surgery to his eyes to look less Japanese and to continue his normal life. Picture From: http://encyclopedia.de nsho.org/Fred_Koremats u/

5  Fred stayed with his girlfriend and was arrested on May 30, 1942 for not following the executive order.  Fred took his case to the U.S. Supreme Court in December of 1944, but lost with a 6-3 vote.  He then returned to the assembly center until the release of Japanese-Americans.  He then moved to Detroit, Michigan where he met his wife, Katherine.

6  Fred and Katherine Korematsu were married in Detroit before they moved to the San Francisco Bay area.  They raised their two children, Karen and Ken, in California.  In 1998, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, 7 years before he died.  His wife, Katherine, died in 2013, 8 years after his death.

7  http://www.softschools.com/facts/history /japanese_internment_camps_facts/888 / http://www.softschools.com/facts/history /japanese_internment_camps_facts/888 /  http://www.historyonthenet.com/ww2/ja pan_internment_camps.htm http://www.historyonthenet.com/ww2/ja pan_internment_camps.htm  http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Fred_K orematsu/ http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Fred_K orematsu/  http://www.seattletimes.com/nation- world/fred-korematsu-86-fought-world- war-ii-internment-dies/ http://www.seattletimes.com/nation- world/fred-korematsu-86-fought-world- war-ii-internment-dies/

8 hhttp://korematsuinstitute.org/institute/ab outfred/


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