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Inserts His/her Inserts Inserts Grade (01, 04, Role of Congressional Public Hearings in Winning Reparations The role of congressional public hearings on the camps in 1980 and 1981 on winning reparations cannot be ignored. There is significant evidence that congressional public hearing on the internment of Japanese people in United States played a role in changing the opinion of the general public. The public hearings of the Commission on the Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians included testimonials of actual victims of the internment (Japanese American National Museum Quarterly, 11-16).
People gave their own account of the difficulties they faced in camps. These testimonials played a significant role in shifting the public opinion in the favor of the Japanese victims and eventually made a strong case for reparations.It is also justified to infer that public hearings played a role in winning reparations because the hearings went on for only 5 months and still they prompted positive recommendation from the commission. This shows that the public hearings had a significant effect on shaping general public opinion that eventually paved way for reparation.
The public hearings also listened to around 750 original victims who had their emotional tales listened by the general public (Japanese American National Museum Quarterly, 11-16). The overwhelming number of testimonies is also evidence of the fact that these public hearings had a role in shaping public opinion related to war time internment of Japanese American people. This is why it is safe to conclude that there is significant evidence that public hearings on camps played a role in winning reparations.
Works Cited PageChronology of WWII Incarceration. Japanese American National Museum Quarterly, 9, 3, 1994. Print
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