Connell uncovers a little known World War II top secret program.
The United States demanded that Latin American governments
deport--or allow the United States to take--anyone of Japanese
ancestry and place them in camps in Texas and New Mexico. The plan
was to trade them for American civilians held by the Japanese.
Although Peru was the most enthusiastic participant in this
program, expelling nearly 5,000 Peruvian citizens of Japanese
ancestry, other Latin American countries participated as well.
Connell traces the reasons for prejudice and discrimination, the
specific programs, and the post-war efforts of those held in
American relocation camps to secure restitution. Through the wide
use of oral interviews as well as documents, Connell shows the very
human side of this effort, which in many ways parallels the
discrimination Americans of Japanese ancestry faced during the war.
This book provides a thorough and intriguing story of interest to
general readers as well as scholars, students, and other
researchers involved with World War II and Latin American
history.
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