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Internment vs Concentration

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

INTERNMENT VS CONCENTRATION

A COMPARISON BETWEEN TWO CAMPS
Photo by England

What are the concentration camps and why were they formed?
Jewish Concentration camps were used in Germany and held many jewish people. The phrase concentration camps refers to a camp where people are confined, usually under harsh conditions. These camps were formed by hitler, when he overpowered all of Germany. He didn't want or like jewish people, so he told nautsies to gather all the jewish people and send them to concentration camps, where they eventually did harsh labor.

What are internment camps and why were they formed?
Internment means putting a person in prison or another form of detention generally in wartime. The Japanese were placed in internment during world war 2 after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. In fear of any Japanese people living on the west coast being spy's the president created executive order 9066. Which caused all Japanese people to be put into camps.

Similarities between the two camps.
Both camps held in a specific ethnicity/race. The people in the camps were put in there because of a war. They had living quarters called barracks. All the people in the camps were treated unfairly.

Differences between the two camps.
The two camps had many differences. One of the main differences would be the fact that Japanese people were not tortured just to be tortured unlike the jewish people. The jewish people were tripped, injured, or killed. Almost 6,000 people died everyday. In concentration camps their lives were planned out for them and it was the same everyday, wake up, breakfast, morning roll call, join work team, work, lunch, return to camp, evening roll call, dinner, return to barrack. The Japanese people lived freely and were only injured if they tried to leave the camp.

How can we make sure this doesn't happen again?
We can make sure this doesn't happen again if we test people equally and fairly. We can also achieve this goal by not assuming that people are bad, but having evidence that proves they are either good or bad.

THE END

HOPE YOU LEARNED A LOT ABOUT THE TWO CAMPS