
Overview
During World War II, more than 20,000 people of Japanese ancestry were forcibly relocated in Canada. Many of them were interned in camps set up in a frozen wilderness. Camp life was going to deprive the teenagers of a proper education, but female missionaries stepped in to lend a helping hand. They set up high schools and provided the students with moral support and inspiration. This is the little-known story of the search for hope in the dark days of wartime Canada.
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3 - 1A Doctor Beside the Deathbed January 12, 2019
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3 - 2Epic Challenge: A Race Across the Japanese Alps January 19, 2019
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3 - 3Reviving Kumamoto Castle February 09, 2019
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3 - 4Class Struggle: Changes to China's Education System February 16, 2019
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3 - 5A Vanished Dream: Wartime Story of My Japanese Grandfather March 16, 2019
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3 - 6Vessel of Friendship: An Untold Story March 30, 2019
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3 - 9
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3 - 10A Journey through Genders July 06, 2019
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3 - 11Bettering Tibet July 20, 2019
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3 - 12I too was a Child of Camp. August 17, 2019
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3 - 13Hope in the Dark August 24, 2019
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3 - 14MATAGI - Worshipping Bears September 14, 2019
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3 - 15Helping Hands - The Lives of Atomic Bomb Orphans September 21, 2019
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3 - 16The United Red Army: A Troubled Legacy September 28, 2019
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3 - 17The Lives of Japanese War Brides in America: Part 1 October 05, 2019
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3 - 18The Lives of Japanese War Brides in America: Part 2 October 12, 2019
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3 - 191971 - Japanese Rugby Takes On England, And The World October 19, 2019
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3 - 20Chinese Internet Celebrities: Influencing the Huge Online Market November 09, 2019
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3 - 21Henoko: Living with an American Base November 16, 2019
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3 - 22Digging the Untold History December 14, 2019
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