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result(s) for
"World War, 1939-1945 Prisoners and prisons, Japanese Juvenile literature."
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Japanese Canadian internment in the Second World War
by
Hickman, Pamela
,
Fukawa, Masako, 1940-
in
World War (1939-1945)
,
1939-1945
,
Japanese Canadians Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945 Juvenile literature.
2011
This book is an illustrated history of the wartime internment of Japanese Canadian residents of British Columbia. At the time when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, Japanese Canadians numbered well over 20,000. From the first arrivals in the late nineteenth century, they had taken up work in many parts of BC, established communities, and become part of the Canadian society even though they faced racism and prejudice in many forms. With war came wartime hysteria. Japanese Canadian residents of BC were rounded up, their homes and property seized, and forced to move to internment camps with inadequate housing, water, and food. Men and older boys went to road camps while some families ended up on farms where they were essentially slave labour. Eventually, after years of pressure, the Canadian government admitted that the internment was wrong and apologized for it. This book uses a wide range of historical photographs, documents, and images of museum artefacts to tell the story of the internment. The impact of these events is underscored by first-person narrative from five Japanese Canadians who were themselves youths at the time their families were forced to move to the camps.
No better friend : a man, a dog, and their incredible true story of friendship and survival in World War II
by
Weintraub, Robert, author
in
Judy (Dog), 1936-1950 Juvenile literature.
,
Williams, Frank, 1919-2003 Juvenile literature.
,
Judy (Dog), 1936-1950.
2016
Tells the incredible true story of Frank Williams, a radarman in Britain's Royal Air Force, and Judy, a purebred pointer, who met as prisoners of war during World War II. Judy, who became the war's only official canine POW, was a fiercely loyal dog who sensed danger-warning her fellow prisoners of imminent attacks and, later, protecting them from brutal beatings. Frank and Judy's friendship, an unbreakable bond forged in the worst circumstances, is one of the great recently uncovered stories of World War II.