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Read the Presidential Letter of Apology. Do you think this response is sufficient? Write about this letter from two viewpoints: the president of the United States or a Japanese American. Support your opinion with evidence from the text?

User Ogglas
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2 Answers

5 votes

Answer:

I do believe that the presidential leaders did apologize to the best of their ability. It's incredibly difficult to apologize for a massacre, just because of how many lives were lost. However, I do not believe any emotion was put into these letters. However, this is just my personal opinion and this is just how I read the articles.

Step-by-step explanation:

I just took the quiz and felt this was a good answer. Good luck!

User Stig Hemmer
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5 votes

Answer:

I think the letter shows a sincere attempt to make amends.

If I were a Japanese American, I might have the following reactions:

The memories of internment still make me sad and angry. But I am happy that the president himself has admitted "that serious injustices were done to Japanese Americans during World War II." The president’s apology is a sincere effort to heal the emotional scars of the Japanese American community.

The president’s apology doesn't undo the damage that was done. But the lines "We must learn from the past" and "we can guarantee a future with liberty and justice" give me hope that no other ethnic group will be targeted in that way again.

Explanation: this is what my teacher said

User Maciej Stachowski
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