In November 1942, my mother wrote of the peculiar challenges facing children and teachers in camp: “A concentrated minority group, forced to leave their homes with minimum essentials to lead a life of existence, to settle in an entirely new environment, a new type of daily living, facing the problems of this new adjustment in a community far removed from other communities.” These circumstances gave rise to “difficulties in family life, emotional upsets and instability in the family.”
Remembering the Japanese American Incarceration