The War Years And Beyond
Years Of Sorrow And Shame
(1941-1949)
Shortly after Japan's entry into World War II on December
7, 1941 , Japanese Canadians were removed from the West Coast. "Military
necessity" was used as a justification for their mass removal and
incarceration despite the fact that senior members of Canada's military
and the RCMP had opposed the action, arguing that Japanese Canadians posed
no threat to security. And yet the exclusion from the west coast was to
continue for four more years until 1949. The massive injustice was a culmination
of the movement to eliminate Asians from the west coast begun decades
earlier in British Columbia.
The
order in 1942, to leave the "restricted area" and move 100 miles
(160km) inland from the west coast was made under the authority of the
War Measures Act and affected over 21,000 Japanese Canadians. Most were
first held in the livestock barns in Hastings Park (Vancouver's Pacific
National Exhibition grounds) and then moved to hastily built camps in
the BC interior. At first, many men were separated from their families
and sent to road camps in Ontario and on the BC/Alberta border. Small
towns in the BC interior such as Greenwood, Sandon, New Denver and Slocan
became internment quarters mainly for women, children and the aged. To
stay together, some families agreed to work on sugar beet farms in Alberta
and Manitoba where there were labour shortages. Those who resisted and
challenged the orders of the Canadian government were rounded up by the
RCMP and incarcerated in a barbed-wire prisoner-of-war camp in Angler,
Ontario.
Despite
earlier government promises to the contrary, the Custodian of Enemy Alien
Property sold the confiscated property. The proceeds were used to pay
auctioneers and realtors, and to cover storage and handling fees. The
remainder paid for the small allowances given to those in internment camps.
Unlike prisoners of war of enemy nations who were protected by the Geneva
Convention, Japanese Canadians were forced to pay for their own internment.
Their movements were restricted and their mail censored.
As
World War II was drawing to a close, Japanese Canadians were strongly
encouraged to prove their "loyalty" by "moving east of
the Rockies" immediately or sign papers agreeing to be "repatriated"
to Japan when the war was over. Many moved to the Prairie provinces, Ontario
and Quebec. About 4,000, half of them Canadian-born were exiled in 1946
to Japan. Prime Minister MacKenzie King declared in the House of Commons
on August 4, 1944:
It is a fact no person of Japanese race born in Canada has been
charged with any act of sabotage or disloyalty during the years of war.
On April 1, 1949, four years after the war was over, all
the restrictions were lifted and Japanese Canadians were given full citizenship
rights, including the right to vote and the right to return to the west
coast. But there was no home to return to. The Japanese Canadian community
in British Columbia was virtually destroyed.
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