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Answer plz. Why was life in the relocation camps difficult?

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Answer:

it became difficult for them to rejoin a society that had exiled them for reasons they had no control over, the Japanese Americans that had to go through the internment camps could no longer trust their own country and the government behind it. Psychological troubles soon began after the end of the internment camps as well, when people where expressing their disgust for the Japanese Americans. Citizens would dedicate their time to sending letter to local newspapers sharing their thoughts on why Japanese Americans should not be allowed in their vicinity.

There was neither freedom nor privacy, and the Japanese Americans were not allowed any of the natural rights given to them by the Constitution. So in many ways, these internment camps were like prisons for the Japanese Americans. At the camps, entire families had to share a little one room barrack. Entire interment camps were typically made out of about thirty to forty residential blocks with each having several rooms.

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i hope this helps

User Rob Young
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Answer:

because the people where gassed and put in danger because of Hitler

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User Vijay Kumbhar
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