The answer is FALSE.
It is not true that Japanese Americans were forced to relocate to guarded camps because they were becoming successful business people. They were forced into these camps because the US Government feared they were helping the enemy in World War II.
Good luck :)
1)The United States was an Attractove Place for Immigrants to come during the early 20th Century because the Immigrants had substantial lower-paying jobs.
2)The Factors that pulled them from their Native Countries to the US is:
Better Housing, More Paying Jobs.
3)The immigrants who reached the US during the Early 1800s were known as old immigrants. Others who reached the US during the Late 1800s were known as New Immigrants. The Difference is the type of people that immigrated. Another Difference is the reasons why they paved the way for Immigration. Old immigrants generally came from Northern and Central Europe, Especially England and its territories.
<span>Example: A Poor Person will go to the US for a High-paying job.<span /></span>
Survivors faces many challenges, they managed to live through beatings. They lived through things such as living on little to no food. All of the people that went in the concentration camps, came out very skinny and unhealthy, or didn’t come out at all. Most of the Jews went in concentration camps, went in as a family. So if one person were to survive and the other family members get burned in the gas chambers, or starved to death, it would be painful to experience To say the least, not even being able to know if they are living or not would be scary because the German soldiers cared less about what they were worried about, hitler had convinced them that Germany would be better without the Jews, and that the Jews was the problem. They faced many difficulties, they had no way of getting out of that place unless hitler did not have the power and authority over them anymore.
Answer:
Because they had everything they needed. They had water, fish, and they could also grow crops, too. So basically they had food, water, and vegetables.