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CANADIAN CONTROVERSIES OF WWII Conscription, Interment Camps, War Measures Act , and The Holocaust

Canadian Controversies of WWII

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Canadian Controversies of WWII. Conscription, Interment Camps, War Measures Act , and The Holocaust. Conscription of WWII. At the start of WWII, the Prime Minister promised that there would be no conscription for overseas service. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Canadian Controversies of WWII

CANADIAN CONTROVERSIES OF WWIIConscription, Interment Camps, War Measures Act , and The Holocaust

Page 2: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Conscription of WWII

At the start of WWII, the Prime Minister promised that there would be no conscription for overseas service.

In the 1940s Prime Minister King introduced the

National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA) All single men over 18 to register for compulsory

military service. The drafted soldiers were not sent into combat

overseas, but were to remain in Canada for home defense.

These men were referred to as zombies

Page 3: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Conscription Crisis of 1944

Feeling pressured to introduce conscription

In 1942, they held a public referendum regarding conscription

The Prime Minister asked for the nation to release him from his promise from 1939. French Canadians voted 73% “NO” (against

conscription) English Canadians voted 80% “YES” (for

conscription)

Page 4: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Why were French Canadians against Conscription?

Some key factors: Language barrier in the forces No loyalty to Britain or France Prime Minister should keep his

promise Few French speaking officers Training in English Many French Canadians viewed

Canada’s role as simply supporting the British in a European war rather than fighting a war that would directly affect French Canadians.

Page 5: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Conscription Crisis of 1944

The referendum Further appeals for voluntary

enlistment

Increased casualties meant that more troops were needed.

King decided to make the “Zombies” go overseas. forced to fight in the war 13000 were sent, 2500 reached the

battle fields

Protests in the streets of Montreal

Page 6: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Japanese Canadian Internment Camps

What Rights are Important to Me?

Page 7: Canadian Controversies of WWII

What does Internment Camp mean? An internment camps

are facilities where enemies or certain groups of people are usually kept during war.

People are confined usually for political reasons not for a punishment of a crime.

Page 8: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Japanese Canadian Internment Camps

1942, 22 000 Japanese Canadians To internment camps in B.C Labour camps on the prairies

Japanese living in B.C. were native born citizens.

One suitcase of their personal belongings Government confiscated

everything else. All confiscated possessions were

sold at public auctions for profit, to pay for the internment camps

Page 9: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Reasons

Started after the attack on Pearl Harbour For security precaution.

Feared that the Japanese working in the fishing industry were charting the coast for the Japanese navy.

Military and RCMP didn’t want to act against the Japanese Federal cabinet minister pushed

the Canadian government to take action

Page 10: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Results

1942 the War Measures Act gave the government power to intern all people of Japanese race.

Resisting caused risk of deportation back to Japan.

Results of the government were that: Canadian companies fired all their Japanese

employees Japanese fish boats were not permitted to leave

port.

10 Japanese Internment Camps in Canada. They consisted of: 3 road camps, 2 prisoner of war

camps (POW) and 5 self-supporting camps.

Page 11: Canadian Controversies of WWII
Page 12: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Living conditions. Conditions were poor Homes were shacks:

Not insulated. Made out of thin wood boards Condensation caused walls to

freeze in the winter Lack of running water and

electricity. There were roofs but no

ceilings in the shacks. Usually men and teenage boys

were separated from their families.

Page 13: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Aftermath

Freedom on 1 April 1949

43years after WWII in 1988 Prime Minister Brian Mulroney acknowledged the hardship of the Japanese

Provided compensation packages for each individual directly wronged.

Page 14: Canadian Controversies of WWII

The War Measures Act

Statue passed in 1914 that gave Federal Cabinet that power to govern by decree and to suspend civil liberties during times of war or national security. 1940 the government revoked the

Canadian citizenship of Italian and German immigrants

Sent to internment camps

Page 15: Canadian Controversies of WWII

The Holocaust

Anti-Jewish Policy

Page 16: Canadian Controversies of WWII

The Holocaust

Holocaust has a Greek origin sacrifice by completely burning.

Nazi Regime systematically rounded up millions of Jews across Europe and shipped them off to concentration camps.

Over six million Jews were killed.

Majority of the victims were Jews others included: Roma, homosexuals, disabled persons, communists,

Poles, Jehovah Witnesses, political prisoners, and resistance fighters

Page 17: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Concentration Camps

Concentration camps were used to detained the people that the Nazis persecuted. Victims were subjected to inhumane conditions:

gassed, worked and starved to death, executed and completely burned alive.

When the Nazis gained control of the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway and France, hundreds of thousands Jews were forced to leave their homes and were crowded into ghettos. Warsaw

Canada allow 5 000 Jews to immigrate into the country

Page 18: Canadian Controversies of WWII
Page 19: Canadian Controversies of WWII
Page 20: Canadian Controversies of WWII

St. Louis was a ship that carried more than 900 German Jews.

The ship travelled from port to port along the coasts of North and South America seeking refuge.

No country allowed the ship to enter its harbours and the St. Louis was forced to return to Europe

Passengers were confined and sent to concentration camps.

S.S. St. Louis During the Holocaust

Page 21: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Jewish immigrants during WWII The United States accepted

200 000 Jews

Britain accepted 195 000 Jews

600 000 Jews were accepted into other countries such as Argentina, China, Australia and Mexico

Page 22: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Welcome to Canada

Between 1947 and 1949, 1,123 Jewish orphans came to Canada as part of the War Orphans Project.

783 came from concentration camps and 229 from hiding

Most of the orphans that survived were adolescent boys and only 37 were children younger than ten years old.

The majority of the orphans, settled in Montreal, Toronto, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia.

Page 23: Canadian Controversies of WWII

Time Line 1940- government revoked the Canadian citizenship of Italian and German

immigrants. 1942- Japanese Canadians had to start packing and moving out. 1942- William Lyon Mackenzie held a public referendum 1942- 22 000 Japanese Canadians were brought to internment camps in

B.C. 1942- Order-In-Council passed under the war measures act giving the

federal government the power of intern all people of Japanese race. 1944- Conscription Crisis 1944- a high number of causalities– more troops 1949- Japanese Canadians regained freedom 1947-1949- 1,123 Jewish orphans came to Canada 1988- Prime Minister Brian Mulroney apologized and awarded each

individual that was directly wronged with $ 21, 000