Facing Injustice on Absolutely Manitoba - Action News
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Facing Injustice on Absolutely Manitoba

After unearthing the truth about their family history, Japanese Canadians who were relocated to rural Manitoba during the Second World War seek justice. Narrated by David Suzuki.

After unearthing the truth, Japanese Canadians relocated to rural Manitoba seek justice

Art Miki, the boy third from the right, is one of many Japanese Canadians relocated from B.C. to Manitoba during the Second World War. (Submitted by Art Miki)

Facing Injustice:The Relocation of Japanese Canadians to Manitoba

Airs July 28, 2018
7 p.m. onCBCManitoba

Airs September 22, 2018 onCBCTV
2:30 pm NT | 2 pm AT | 1 pm ET | 12 pm CT | 11 am MT | 10 am PT

>> Watch online now

In 1942, during the Second World War, Canada's government forced 22,000 Japanese Canadians from their homes in British Columbia, taking their businesses, their property and their dignity.While many were sent to internment camps, another option allowed Japanese Canadian families to stay together by relocating to sugar beet farms in rural Manitoba.

After the wartime restrictions were lifted in the late 1940s, most of those relocated made the move from rural Manitoba to the capital city of Winnipeg, trying their best to forget this humiliating period in their lives.

By the 1970syounger Japanese Canadians, most of whom were sheltered from the reasons behind the move to Manitoba, began learning the truth of their family history.Through interviews and archival photos and footage, Facing Injustice tells the personal stories behind this little-known period of Canadian history, and shows how one community reconciled the pastand organized a national redress movement.

Produced and directed by Aaron Floresco

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