A PRPAGANDA film showing the lifestyle of Japanese-Americans who forced to relocate during the Second World War shows both the smiling faces of evacuees and the hardships they had to endure. The incredible footage reveals the moment a family-of-three walk into their humble temporary accommodation with just a bed and a window in sight, after being relocated from their homes. The scenes show how the forced evacuees worked make their accommodation feel like home by sawing, putting up curtains, and building toys to entertain their children. Further shots include a mother reading her son a book. Although they had their world turned upside down, many scenes taken by the US government documentary team, depict happy faces despite the challenges they were faced with. The video was released in 1944 by the US War Relocation Authority. Over 110,000 Japanese-Americans were displaced during World War II from 1942 to 1946, seven months after the war with Japan had finished. mediadrumworld.com