Historic Groups that Started Innocent then Took an Evil Turn

Historic Groups that Started Innocent then Took an Evil Turn

Khalid Elhassan - November 8, 2020

Historic Groups that Started Innocent then Took an Evil Turn
Japanese immigrants in a coffee plantation in Brazil. Historic Museum of Japanese Immigration

6. During WWII, the Japanese-Brazilian Community Was Cut Off From News of the Outside World

Brazil joined the Allies in 1942, and declared war on Japan. That deepened the isolation of the country’s Japanese immigrants. All communication with Japan was severed, and no new Japanese were admitted. The immigrants’ radios were confiscated. Those living in the more urban coastal areas, where access to news was easy, were expelled and relocated to the more rural interior, where access to news was quite limited.

Cut off from the outside world and reliable news, Brazil’s Japanese immigrant community became ripe for, and ready recipients of, unreliable news. As a result, many were hurled headfirst into a world of alternative facts – one in which Japan was winning WWII. By the time the war ended in 1945, many Japanese-Brazilians, innocent of the world beyond a small circle, were exceptionally vulnerable to bad information. They sincerely believed that Japan had won the war. Those who disagreed or said any different were in for rough – at times lethally rough – treatment.

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