The living conditions that the American soldiers had to endure is beyond our belief. Whenever they were transported to the camps, they were put into these rusty old freighters for several …show more content…
If anyone tried to or escaped from the camp they had to be executed immediately in front of the other prisoners. (Fukubayashi, Toru) It was very rare for an escape to happen. The prisoners slept in barracks on mats. A barrack is a building or a group of buildings that were used for military personnel. Each barrack could hold up eight to thirteen prisoners in a room. Since, the living conditions were so horrendous, multiple people suffered and died from diseases and starvation. Finally, in 1942, the Japanese decided that each prisoner was allowed to have fifteen ounces of rice or barley, a few vegetables, and some sort of meat each day. In 1942, the Japanese army started to notice that the prisoners were taking the food they were given for granted. In order to make the prisoners suffer more than what they already were, the guards decided to take their food privileges …show more content…
In each camp, there was a small facility that prisoners and soldiers could go to if they needed medical attention, but with the lack of medical supplies there wasn’t much that the facilities could do.The Japanese treated the supplies as sacred as their population. Whenever a prisoner did not show up to work because of an illness, the guards would cut the amount of food they could eat. Lice, fleas, plagues, and infectious diseases spread throughout the camps. ( Urquhart, Alistair). The Tokyo and Osaka Camps thought it would be a wise idea to attach hospitals to their camps. This did