2020年10月20日「モバイル英語学習」第675号 (英語ストーリー): The Story of Joy Kogawa

Notes
camp (捕虜・難民などの長期にわたる)収容所;
rally (政治的・宗教的な)大集会; 示威運動;
injustice 不正、不法、不公平;

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In 1941, Canada went to war with Japan. The prime minister of Canada thought that Japanese Canadians might be spies. So all Japanese Canadians were sent to live and work in camps. Joy Kogawa was six years old when her family was forced from their home. They were put onto a train and shipped to a camp in Slocan, British Columbia, Canada.
After the war, Joy began to work for justice for the Japanese Canadians who had been put in camps. She worked with others to hold meetings, write letters, and organize rallies. Her book, Obasan, helped people across Canada to understand the terrible things that had happened. Finally, in 1988, the federal government said it was sorry for what had happened. It paid back part of what it had taken from Japanese Canadians. It promised to work to make sure such a terrible injustice never happens again. (by Shantel Ivits)
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2020年2月26日「モバイル英語学習」第648(英語のエッセイ): Wood Gas Cars

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Have you ever heard of a car that burns wood? I was talking to a man in his 80s who remembers riding in wood gas cars. When he was a child, gasoline was very expensive. It was easier and cheaper to get wood, so they built cars with engines on the back that burned wood instead of gasoline. There were many of these cars in Europe, too. The engine looked like a big water heater. When the car stopped, the driver or the passengers would get out and put more wood into the engine. Some people have started driving this kind of car again, especially in countries with a lot of trees like Finland. (by Prof. Douglas Jarrell. You can read more such short stories at http://catchawave.jp/m/jm/)
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(Image from https://www.musclecarszone.com)