Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
What an interesting picture. I'm not certain when this was taken.
When you search for Japanese internment, other pictures like this one show up. The more usual ones are shot from the caboose end of the train.
This picture, in many ways, is a shameful picture. The Japanese internment was a black mark in American History. America Treated her citizens as though they were not covered by the Bill of Rights (the first 10 Amendments of the Constitution).
Why are they waiting outside the train? Why are they in single file? Why aren't they talking in small groups? Why are they being guarded by soldiers? Why are the soldiers so close to where the Japanese could sit while they were waiting? Who are the people behind the soldiers and why are they there? Why are most of them women and Children. Why are most of the people standing? Why are only a few on the lower right sitting? What is the American Officer (almost at the focal center of the picture) doing? Why is he there?
Just put these questions in the form of a sentence, and you have an answer to your question.
For example. There are about 100 people all waiting outside the train. They are close together and in single file.