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Wild Daisies in the Sand : Life in a Canadian Internment Camp

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This book reopens a chapter in Canadian history. The book is a series of diary entries beginning in 1941, when author Tom Sando was imprisoned in concentration camps, first in Petawawa and then Angler, Ontario -- a young Japanese Canadian imprisoned only because he was willing to stand and fight for his rights as a Canadian.

The Japanese Canadians relocated to Petawawa and Angler were imprisoned in maximum security penitentiaries: compounds encircled by three layers of barbed wire fences, and under constant surveillance by rifle-armed guards stationed in watchtowers.

These people were not prisoners-of-war or even criminals, but Canadian civilians deemed dangerous by the Canadian government because of their race. This is a unique first-hand look at a part of the Japanese internment that many Canadians are still unfamiliar with.

Tom Sando relates his story of loneliness, fear, and eventually friendship and hope, candidly and with careful thought.

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RRP £15.99
Product Details
NeWest Press
1896300510 / 9781896300511
Paperback / softback
09/07/2003
Canada
230 pages, Illustrations, unspecified
215 x 140 mm, 256 grams