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History of the Japanese in Seattle : ウィキペディア英語版
History of the Japanese in Seattle

There is a population of Japanese Americans and Japanese expatriates in Greater Seattle.
==History==
In the mid-1880s a wave of immigration came from Japan to Seattle. Japanese came because Chinese were prevented from immigrating due to the Chinese Exclusion Act. A Japantown was developed, and Japanese became involved in the local economy. White businesspersons opposed to Japanese settlement formed the Anti-Japanese League in 1919.〔Boswell, Sharon and Lorraine McConaghy. "(Abundant dreams diverted )" ((Archive )). ''The Seattle Times''. June 23, 1996. Retrieved on December 21, 2014.〕
After the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, ethnic Japanese in Seattle were sent to internment camps. 7,000 Japanese persons were forced to leave the Seattle area to go to the Minidoka Relocation Center, while another 1,000 went to other camps. Members of the Japanese community lost their businesses and residences.〔George, Kathy. "(Seattle's Japantown remembered )" ((Archive )). ''Seattle Post-Intelligencer''. Sunday November 21, 2004. Retrieved on April 9, 2015. "The World War II internment of Japanese Americans wiped out an entire Seattle community, forcing the 8,000 residents of "Japantown" to abandon their homes and small businesses." and "After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941, Inouye, her parents and her five siblings were among the 7,000 Seattle-area residents who were rounded up and shipped to an internment camp in Minidoka, Idaho."〕 450 students of the University of Washington were forced to leave the university due to their internment.〔Rolph, Amy. "(Former Japanese-American students graduate UW after a 66-year wait )" ((Archive )). ''Seattle Post-Intelligencer''. Sunday May 18, 2008. Retrieved on April 9, 2015.〕
As the war ended, residents were allowed to return, initially staying in churches, other persons' residences, and the Seattle Japanese Language School building as they recovered from the effects of internment. Japanese Seattleites who were located at Minindoka, which was renamed the "Hunt Camp," named the school the "Hunt Hotel." The Nikkei Heritage Association of Washington started the "Omoide" education program to memorialize the incarceration of the Japanese people.〔Cohen, Aubrey. "(Japanese center holds memories of Hunt Hotel )" ((Archive )). ''Seattle Post-Intelligencer''. Friday June 8, 2007. Retrieved on April 9, 2015.〕 In 2008 UW held an honorary graduation ceremony for the Japanese who had been their studies cut short, with 200 former students, most of whom were in their 80s at the time, and family members of former students present. Tetsuden Kashima, an ethnic studies professor of the university, presented the degrees.〔

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