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Primary Sources Apology Letter to Japanese Internees. 1993. Photograph. The US Government. By The US Government. Web. 31 Jan. 2013.

This is a website that gives us the exact document that Clinton signed as an apology to all of the Japanese Internees. "Executive Order 9066: Resulting in the Relocation of Japanese (1942)." Ourdocuments.gov. Kendall/Hunt Publishing, n.d.Web. 10 Jan. 2013. This is a website that shows the exact wording of Executive Order 9066. This allowed military officials to create internment camps and imprison anyone who they deemed suspicious. Hawaii Army Museum Society. "Hawaii's Japanese Americans." Hawaii Army Museum Society Featuring the U.S. Army Museum at Fort DeRussy in Honolulu, Hawaii. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Jan. 2013. This website shows pictures of the 100th battalion. It was published by the Hawaii Army Museum. "Hawaii: Creating the Aloha State." US History Scene. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Jan. 2013. This website shows us the signing of the Apology letter from Bill Clinton to the Japanese American internees. Honda, Gail M. "The Great Tycoon of Wahiawa." Hawaii Herald 21 Oct. 2011: 8-9. Print. Gail Honda is a professor at Hawaii Pacific University. She is a descendant of Kitchitaro Sekiya, who was an internee. This article talks about Sekiyas life. Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii. Honouliuli Internment Camp. N.d. Photograph.

Hawaii. History of Internment in Hawaii. Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii. Web. This website shows the photo of the Honouliuli Internment camp that was forgotten. Japanese family returning home from a relocation center camp in Hunt, Idaho, found their home and garage vandalized with anti-Japanese graffiti and broken windows in Seattle, Washington, on May 10, 1945. Digital image. theatlantic.ocm . N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Jan. 2013. This picture showed what happened when the Japanese families who were released went back to their homes. Jap Trap. Photograph. Historymatters.gmu.edu. History Matters, 14 Oct. 2009. Web. 19 Oct. 2010. This poster was made in the times of the war showing discrimination against the Japanese people. The mouse represents Hirohito. Korematsu (young). N.d. Photograph. Bill Howe on Multicultural Educaton. Web. 28 Jan. 2013. This is a picture of Fred Korematsu. He made history by being one of the first Japanese to take their case to the Supreme Court. Honda, Mieko. Personal interview. Sept.-Oct. 2012. Mieko Honda lived during the time of World War 2 and her father was imprisoned in an internment camp. Honda, Tatsumi. Personal interview. Sept.-Oct. 2012. Tatsumi Honda lived during the time of World War 2. He fought in the Korean and Vietnam Wars, and taught Farrington High Schools ROTC

program. Honouliuli: Hawaii's Hidden Internment Camp. Dir. Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii. Youtube. N.p., 14 May 2010. Web. 30 Jan. 2013. This video provides both first and second hand accounts of the events that happened immediately after Pearl Harbor. It uncovers the hidden internment camp at Honouliuli. Ray Nosaka. N.d. Photograph. The Hawaii Nisei Story. By University of Hawaii. Web. 30 Jan. 2013. This is a photo of Ray Nosaka who fought in World War II with the 100th battalion. Sen. Inouye. N.d. Photograph. National Review Online. 17 Dec. 2012. Web. 28 Jan. 2013. This website gives a photograph of the late senator Daniel Inouye. This is a photo of Inouye when he was in the 100th battalion fighting for our country in World War II. Soga, Keiho, George Hoshida, Jiro Nakano, and Kay Nakano. Poets behind Barbed Wire: Tanka Poems. Honolulu, HI: Bamboo Ridge, 1983. Print. This is a book of poems that were put together. The poems are written by those who have been University of Hawaii. Takashi Kitaoka. N.d. Photograph. The Hawaii Nisei Story. Web. 30 Jan. 2013. This is a photograph of Takashi Kitaoka, a member of the 100th battalion. University of Hawaii. "THE HAWAI'I NISEI STORY Americans of Japanese Ancestry

During WWII." 12: Military Training. N.p., n.d. Web. 30 Jan. 2013. This website gives a first hand anecdotes about the lives of the people in the 100th battalion and their lives. University Of Hawaii Manoa. VVV Assembled in Formal Dress with Gas Masks. Identifiable Men Are Harry Sato, Yoshiyuki Hirano, Yasuhiro Fujita, James Okuda, David Fujita, Thomas Shintani, Masato Yoshimasu, Minoru Ikehara, and James Oka [Courtesy of VVV #10. Ted Tsukiyama Papers, University of Hawaii at Manoa Library]. N.d. Photograph. Hamilton Library, Honolulu Library. 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans. 2011. Web. 29 Jan. 2013. This is a picture of the Varsity Victory Volunteers lined up at attention. University of Texas. "Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, National Archives and Records Administration." Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, National Archives and Records Administration. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Jan. 2013. This site shows us the President Reagan signing the Reparations bill for the Japanese Internees. U.S. Army Museum of Hawaii. Internee Tents at Sand Island Shortly after the Camp Opened in December, 1941. N.d. Photograph. U.S. Army Museum of Hawaii, Honolulu. World War II Internment in Hawaii. Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii, 2010. Web. 29 Jan. 2013. This is a photograph of the site where Japanese Internees would have to stay while imprisoned at Sand Island. US Department of the Navy. Pearl Harbor Looking Southwest. N.d. Photograph. Naval Historical Center. Awesome Stories. Web. 31 Jan. 2013.

This is a picture taken by the US Navy. It is of Pearl Harbor before World War II.

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