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Read the questions below from Interview with Marielle Tsukamoto and answer the question that follows. Question: How long did your family spend in an internment camp? Question: What is one thing you would like everyone to know about Japanese American internment? Question: What was a typical day like for you in the camps? Question: What do you remember about having to leave your home in Florin, California? Question: What were the saddest memories you remember? Question: What were some of the happy moments you remember? Question: What would you like us to know about your mother? What was the interviewers’ purpose? to ask about Tsukamoto’s mother’s experience during internment to question the facts in history books regarding Japanese internment to learn about the human experience during internment to prove an unusual point about Japanese internment

User Magcus
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Answer:

It is: To learn about the human experience during internment.

Step-by-step explanation:

Hope this helped:)

User MikeNereson
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Answer:

To learn about the human experience during internment.

Step-by-step explanation:

Japanese internment was a very black experience in American History. Books have been written about it. I have lived in two such places where the Japanese (Canadians in my experience) were interred.

One was when I was an adult: New Denver British Columbia. I can tell you that things were not good there. The housing was poor (no insulation), which could hardly stand up to the cold wet winds that came off the lake.

The other was in Lethbridge, Alberta where the winds were dry but continuous and added to the freezing temperatures in winter.

Escape was impossible in both places. New Denver would require that you live off the land undetected for long periods of time. The Japanese did not have a background good enough to do that. And Lethbridge was no better: the prairies down there are very open. There's no where to hide or survive even if you knew how. You'd be easily spotted. And your diet would be non existant at best.

I've given you all this background so you would know why I picked what I picked.

I think the asker was trying to get at what it was really like to be interred with no hope of bettering yourself. The monotony must have driven most people crazy. So I would pick the third one down.

To learn about the human experience during internment.

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