Transcript
Page 1: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

The Homefront

World War Two

Page 2: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

The Conscription Crisis, 1942

• Canadians could volunteer for military service • The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

– Gave the government powers to draft men into the military for short periods, and for service within Canada

• Volunteer rates varied in different regions of the country • Ontario’s volunteer rate was more than double that of

Quebec’s • Politicians argued that there was a need for soldiers on the

warfront • Prime Minister King promised numerous times that there

would be no overseas conscription and he did not want to break the promise that he had made to Canadians

Page 3: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

The Conscription Crisis, 1942• Plebiscite

– Reflects the views of Canadians on an issue, but the results the results do not have to be put into place by the government

– The results- the majority voted YES in all provinces except for Quebec

– King viewed this as a divided response and decided to avoid the issue

• 1944: shortage of trained soldiers – 15,000 soldiers were needed and there were

not enough volunteers to meet this demand • November 1944

– Beginning of conscription government conscripted NRMA soldiers to be sent overseas

– First conscripted soldiers left for Europe in December and reached the warfront in February 1945

– War was almost over – Only 2643 conscripts ever reached the

warfront

Page 4: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

Propaganda

• Materials designed to convince the public of their opinions/beliefs

• The Canadian government produced sources of propaganda (posters, films, radio advertisements)

• Designed to convince Canadians to contribute to the war effort, to express the threat of the enemy, and to increase pride among Canadians

Page 5: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)
Page 6: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)
Page 7: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)
Page 8: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)
Page 9: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)
Page 10: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

The Treatment of Japanese-Canadians• 1941

– 23,000 Japanese Canadians living in Canada

– 22,000 of those lived in British Columbia • Many of them lived in Japan and had later

come to Canada • More than half were Japanese descendents

who had been born in Canada • Japanese Canadians were looked at as

suspicious – Worried that they supported Japan, not

Canada • Many Japanese-Canadians served as soldiers

during WW1 – Were promised the right to vote in 1918

because of this – The outbreak of war led to this promise

been broken

Page 11: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

The Treatment of Japanese-Canadians

• The bombing of Pearl Harbor by Japan led to increased discrimination towards Japanese-Canadians – They were worried that Canada would be

attacked from within

• “Relocation Centres”, 1942 – Japanese-Canadians in BC were invited to

move to an area called the Okananagan Valley where they would live in temporary camps

– 750 moved voluntarily

• Internment Camps – The government forced the rest of them to

leave their homes – Families were split up – Lived in central BC in wood cabins without

insulation or proper heating – Some chose to move to another province so

that they could remain with their family

Page 12: The Homefront World War Two. The Conscription Crisis, 1942 Canadians could volunteer for military service The National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA)

The Treatment of Japanese-Canadians

• January 1943 – The Custodian of Enemy Property (federal government official) was

given the power to confiscate the property of Japanese-Canadians • Sold at low prices, and the owners received little to noting

• 1945 (at the end of the war) – Japanese-Canadians had two (horrible) options

• Apply for repatriation to Japan, or permanently settle east of the Rocky Mountains

– 3964 repatriated to Japan, 1979 of whom had been born in Canada – Repatriation order cancelled in 1947

• 1988, the government apologizes for its actions – Paid $21,000 to each of the 1400 people still living who had been

affected by the Repatriation policy