Japanese deportations in Canada during WWII : Throwaway Citizens (1995) - The Fifth Estate

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 96

  • @stitcher64
    @stitcher64 7 років тому +66

    Why wasn't I taught about this in Canadian History? As well as, residential schools?

    • @Folie-life
      @Folie-life 3 роки тому +2

      Maybe because they dont want you to know thats

    • @cosmicrose1697
      @cosmicrose1697 3 роки тому +3

      i'm getting taught this for a project

    • @vothbetilia4862
      @vothbetilia4862 2 роки тому

      Wdym this was taught in grade 7 to 9.

    • @vothbetilia4862
      @vothbetilia4862 2 роки тому

      @@themetaphysicalrev99 Well I did.

    • @deborahlerech2413
      @deborahlerech2413 9 місяців тому +2

      Using this to teach my Grade 10s today.

  • @Thedokla1
    @Thedokla1 3 роки тому +16

    "Awful crimes are committed in the world by virtue of that kind of dissociation"

  • @aidvn5583
    @aidvn5583 5 років тому +37

    i appreciate how the interviewer showed his disgust in Gordon Robertsons answer 27:19

  • @nspbdyoutube6627
    @nspbdyoutube6627 2 роки тому +10

    I couldnt stop my tears. How many generations it will take to call ourselves a true canadian? Every now and then someone comes to power and introduce some kinda bill that shows “ hey you arent canadian, leave” . Heart broken and really worried about my next gen.

  • @valentinius62
    @valentinius62 3 місяці тому +1

    So basically "I was just following orders." 🙊🙉🙈

  • @arranquick2162
    @arranquick2162 6 років тому +3

    but there is alaso the issue what happened to the chinnese was terrible too by japan empire so called

  • @marbarosi
    @marbarosi 5 років тому

    No Japanese faces in the crowd? I'm not saying they are, but they could be. 23:10

  • @rodentary
    @rodentary 3 роки тому

    Is it just me, or is most of this about money and fear?

  • @silklavender
    @silklavender 4 роки тому +1

    Hi tiffany 🙃

    • @xtwofourj
      @xtwofourj 4 роки тому +2

      Did you know that this is public

  • @levmanou9874
    @levmanou9874 2 роки тому

    !!!

  • @hoomalumalu
    @hoomalumalu 6 років тому +10

    this is nothing compared to what the Japanese did to their enemy aliens. read "Three came home".

  • @AudreyHeadley
    @AudreyHeadley 7 років тому +24

    @fifthestate thank for this documentary did not know at that period of time Canada was out right racist and brutal against these people blows my mind.

  • @silklavender
    @silklavender 4 роки тому +13

    I’m convinced all Gordons are mean

  • @crystalevans2123
    @crystalevans2123 7 років тому +30

    Why didn't they allow the Japanese to show their loyalty to Canada by allowing them to serve in the Canadian military? The US did this by the formation of the 442nd and 100th Infantry Battalions, that were made up of Japanese American soldiers. These were the most decorated Army units in history.

    • @rodentary
      @rodentary 3 роки тому +2

      They did with some of them. They were given the opportunity to enlist

  • @gimpycanuck2
    @gimpycanuck2 3 роки тому +7

    Gordon Robertson please remember the "I was just following orders" dies in Nuremberg. Your attitude makes me ill and embarrassed as a Canadian citizen.

  • @rodentary
    @rodentary 3 роки тому +11

    Gordon Robertson is just defending himself and trying to shift the blame.

    • @arikcarlo
      @arikcarlo Рік тому +1

      Agreed. a shameful spectacle of self-justification by a criminal against humanity.

  • @UFC16
    @UFC16 3 роки тому +6

    We learned about aboriginal history in school why not this? Are we all not people? Don’t we have the right to know? My youth in shambles.

  • @djallalnamri1
    @djallalnamri1 7 років тому +10

    the lack of intelligence is peculiar to man: the "Canadians" suddenly remember that they come from everywhere and from nowhere ... they remember that they also come from Japan ... the "Canadians" who come from elsewhere turn against the "Canadians" who come from Japan ... total confusion ...

  • @quebecoisforce961
    @quebecoisforce961 6 років тому +9

    Japanese Canadians
    September 1988, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney signs the agreement to compensate the Japanese-Canadians for the expropriation of their property and their internment during World War II
    The Conservative government of Brian Mulroney was sympathetic to claims by Japanese Canadians, and opened negotiations in the mid-1980s. However, the government hesitated to place a dollar amount on a settlement, and activists debated whether to press for individual payments or a collective settlement. In mid-1988, Mulroney assigned Secretary of State Lucien Bouchard to broker an agreement. In September 1988 (some six weeks after a similar redress bill was enacted in Washington) an agreement was reached in Canada. The terms of the Canadian settlement included an official apology, a redress payment of $21,000 to each surviving individual affected by official policy, a community fund of $12 million and funding for a Canadian Race Relations Foundation to support human rights projects.

    • @arikcarlo
      @arikcarlo Рік тому

      A pittance compared to what was looted by the Canadian government.

  • @afrobian1
    @afrobian1 6 років тому +5

    Im here too find out more about this subject because i just finished reading Forgiveness by Mark Sakamoto!!

  • @seranig
    @seranig 4 роки тому +15

    THIS MUST NEVER BE ALLOWED TO HAPPEN TO ANYONE. NEVER AGAIN !!!!!!!

    • @user-dr4yx2hf9y
      @user-dr4yx2hf9y 4 роки тому +4

      Unfortunately, systemic racial discrimination still exist in Canada.

    • @vothbetilia4862
      @vothbetilia4862 2 роки тому +2

      @@user-dr4yx2hf9y Bruh not just in Canada, the whole world.

  • @nspbdyoutube6627
    @nspbdyoutube6627 2 роки тому +2

    Wish i could fly to moon and live there. This world is not for human anymore.

  • @JBa-xr1kw
    @JBa-xr1kw 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for speaking the truth. ♥

  • @fwcolb
    @fwcolb 5 років тому +2

    As I recall, General MacArthur was military governor of Japan at the time. He refused to accept as "repatriated" persons anyone who was defined as Canadian in Canada's 1910 Immigration Act and 1921 Canadian Nationals Act. That included naturalized Japanese and those wives and children who were born in Canada.

  • @satsukiina5854
    @satsukiina5854 Рік тому +2

    An exquisitely told story of the racist immoral policy of ethnic cleansing. Thank you for your good work researching, challenging, and bringing this story to light.

  • @caliden3785
    @caliden3785 7 років тому +11

    I knew in america we treated the Japanese terribly but never knew this happened in Canada,very sad. I wonder what happened if anyone was mixed as i am sure it happened.Were they forced to leave too......

  • @Jade-xu6xj
    @Jade-xu6xj 3 роки тому +1

    Why does McKenzie look like the mayor from Tomas the train??

  • @pikeman80
    @pikeman80 5 років тому +1

    It's nice to see Canadians isolated and shunned by the Canadian government. Ethnic cleansing....and filling the pockets of the rich in the process

  • @jeremykwanhongkok4221
    @jeremykwanhongkok4221 3 роки тому +1

    V-J Day in Canada was like the war is over internationally but it is still ongoing regionally against the Japanese-Canadians.

  • @lindaiio24
    @lindaiio24 Рік тому +1

    Whatever happened then, disgusting and cruel as it was, the Japanese Canadians are the kindest, hard working people. My children can vouch for this as well. Any person of Japanese heritage, although angry, should be so proud of their grace and beauty

    • @donnywhite3961
      @donnywhite3961 9 місяців тому

      Thank you, my mom and her grandparents are of Japanese descent. And I really appreciate your thoughtful and gratitude and God bless. You made the lord keeps safe amen

  • @Kawayoporu
    @Kawayoporu 5 років тому +1

    I heard they lost a Japantown in Vancouver, but US was lucky to never lose any Japanese districts, they have them today, but the worse thing is there was a country called brazil did a similar thing like arrest them or force them to go on a corridor of death, but today US has over millions of Japanese today, but Canada didn't sadly and they say brazil had way more Japanese then an English territory more then US while US has more then Canada like it's not fair brazil has millions more then US or Canada, I wish Canada has the millions like the US, it's weird, because brazil is a poor country, but they only have one Japanese district, but I am jealous there are chinatowns in Canada or US being famous in films more then Japantowns, I'm jealous that brazil has an only one surviving Japanese district and Canada didn't in Vancouver, but lots of chinese or koreans were moving in the brazilian Japanese district now a days seemed to becoming a chinatown soon, I don't know, but I wish chinatowns are always famous in brazil instead that way in their portuguese films, but for unknown reasons they say brazil did not have a chinatown, but the chinese have always move to brazil just, before the Japanese, anybody knew or know that stuff I am shocked of Canada didn't get that, I hate it that the Japanese went to that poor country brazil and not Canada, because Canada wasn't that poor so it be better if Canada has millions with the US has that many too and brazil would just have very few Japanese be better?
    They said that brazil was peaceful with Japan and it's not fair, brazil is not an English territory for the Japanese to speak English everyday as the Japanese here in our Anglo America continent!

  • @RayneSaltair
    @RayneSaltair 6 років тому +1

    I wonder if interment camps like down here in the USA is the "worse" he really meant. This is so sad.

    • @DaL33T5
      @DaL33T5 5 років тому +2

      American here - I actually think our approach to internment was somewhat better (albeit still inexcusable). For one thing, after the camps were closed, Japanese Americans were allowed to return to the West Coast (although their old property wasn't guaranteed to be there, unfortunately). And the camps themselves, while not perfect, weren't the worst places to live - they had newspapers and limited self-government, sometimes allowed internees to briefly leave the camp to go into nearby towns, and the internees were even allowed to sign up for military service, most famously in the 442nd Infantry Regiment, where many fought and died bravely for a country that arguably didn't deserve their service, and included among their ranks future Senator Daniel Inouye.
      We were also the first to apologize in 1988, and I suspect the only reason the Canadian government followed suit was because of the attention our apology brought to the issue.
      Again, our actions were motivated by prejudice over sound policy, and the policy of internment is a black stain on both of our country's histories, but I believe that ours was the lesser of the two evils.

  • @toomaskotkas4467
    @toomaskotkas4467 6 років тому +3

    Isn't Canada a wonderful democratic country?

    • @zoso8thegreat
      @zoso8thegreat 6 років тому

      Alan Shore Isn't or wasn't?

    • @highog3288
      @highog3288 4 роки тому +1

      soba tempra wanna know the worst country america

    • @Wareaglegirl9960
      @Wareaglegirl9960 2 роки тому

      @@highog3288 oh shut up! The bs I’ve heard of the most evil comes from Canada. Screw yourself

  • @homephone2260
    @homephone2260 5 років тому +1

    They weren't Canadians they were black

  • @saucenflow
    @saucenflow 3 роки тому +3

    because japan went too far.. way to far. lucky Canadains didn't treat them likewise

    • @vothbetilia4862
      @vothbetilia4862 2 роки тому

      I think the government also did this because the fear of espionage.

  • @nazerlath
    @nazerlath 5 років тому +2

    for some reason in my head i thought its because of hentai

  • @donnywhite3961
    @donnywhite3961 9 місяців тому

    Thank you for bringing to light my grandparents and their history. I'm Japanese Irish and I so appreciate your acknowledgment. And god bless you made lord keep you safe amen