Identity and Internment: The Japanese Australian Experience

  • en
Conference/Presentation

Sep 202122
4:00p.m. - 5:30p.m.

Zoom
British Columbia
Canada


Please join us for a talk by members of Nikkei Australia as they explore the treatment of Nikkei civilians in Australia during the war.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021
4:00-5:30 pm Pacific Daylight time
(Thurs. Sept. 23, 2021 9 am Australia EST, 8 am Japan)
Register here:
 
https://uvic.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMrcuyhqTIuGdzFW3p_XciYDdUhEscg7fQD

Just hours after the declaration of war in December 1941, Japanese in Australia were swiftly arrested. The Nikkei community had shrunk to only 1100 people at the outbreak of war, and the majority (almost 98%) were interned in remote camps around Australia. 

 
There, they joined more than 3000 other Japanese civilians who’d been arrested in Allied-controlled countries such as the Dutch East Indies and New Caledonia, and sent to Australia to be interned. Despite being grouped together as “enemy aliens,” the Japanese internees in Australia were extremely diverse and many did not speak the same language.
 
From February 1946, the majority were repatriated to Japan, many against their will.
 
Join us for a fascinating look at this history and how it compares to the Japanese Canadian story.

 

mkabe . Last modified Sep 01, 2021 6:23 p.m.


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