japanese museum
The museum I visited was the Japanese-American National Museum in Little Tokyo. I kind of excited when I visited the Japanese-American National Museum because it was my first time to go to museum. I felt that Japanese-American Museum was really exquisite in its presentation. Overall, this museum was very interesting in the way it presented their respective heritages.When I first arrived near the Japanese-American National Museum, the museum was eye-catching. A new museum that opened up only months ago, its structure was beautifully sculpted in side and out. I really admired the way the museum presented itself to visitors and its display of such items like the barracks of the World War II internment camps.The first images I saw were the pictures of Japanese-Americans who had a part in the planning and construction of this museum. In the caption inscribed below the picture, the opinions of those in it were given about their experience being a Japanese-American, because either their parents or themselves were onetime residents of the concentration camps of World War II. Many of their reactions included being alienated because of what the motherland had done, which was
With the moving of the many Japanese-American families, many of the community members were arrested during this course of the war, fearing that they might be loyalists, and spread that propaganda to the rest of the community. In Museum, I also saw term "Issei" refers to first generation American-born Japanese, while "Nisei" refers to the second generation, and so forth. With the strong sentiment about the Japanese during the war, it also brought about racism against the Japanese-Americans. Many Americans had lost loved ones serving in our country in the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With this knowledge in mind, I learn to appreciate my own heritage much more. The Japanese endured the anger of the nation during World War II. The big overlap between what I saw at the museums and in our class was very apparent. Many of these camps were located in the deserts of California, Nevada, Arizona, and even far out states like Idaho. " This obviously was put up at one of the schools in the areas where many Japanese-Americans lived during that time. There was a black and white photograph of Japanese schoolgirls in America. I feel that these words are very important to Japanese-Americans because in the museum, these two words were placed to show that these particular Japanese were born in the United States and not in Japan. Like African-Americans, they were looked down upon and were put into segregated schools.
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