Conclusion
Over the course of human history, many nations have experienced violations of human rights: Germany, during WWII with the Holocaust, Armenia, Sudan, Rwanda, and the Soviet Union; not to mention Cambodia. Our great nation of the United States experienced a violation of human rights. Though, the Japanese internment camps did not result in deaths of millions of people; it took away two of man's natural human rights, liberty and property. This goes to show that even the most free nation in the world can experience violation of rights. The institution of slavery and segregation is another example of violations of human rights that most people are familiar with. The Japanese faced even worse treatment they were forced out of their homes and were not repaid until forty five years. The internment of Japanese Americans during the Second World War can not be forgotten because our society must learn from it to move forward in the protection of human rights.