About 22,000 Japanese Canadians in British Columbia were interned during World War II. Categorized as security risks simply because they were of Japanese ancestry, most were British citizens of Canada and sixty percent were Canadian-born. The majority were sent to “interior housing centres” in Slocan Valley in eastern British Columbia, while several thousand able-bodied men were sent to road work camps or sugar beet farms. None were ever found guilty of disloyalty.
Yikes. Thanks for sharing. I have yet to hear an example of reparations that really make things right.