Keith MacKinnon

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There were Japanese orphans, some living in orphanages and others who had been adopted by people of other races. There were foster children as well. They would all have to be taken from their orphanages or their foster homes. And then what was to be done with the bedridden elderly? Pregnant women about to give birth? The chronically ill? The mentally disabled? People recovering from surgeries in hospitals? All would—somehow—have to move.
Facing the Mountain: A True Story of Japanese American Heroes in World War II
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