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Japanese Americans carry trauma from WWII internment camp

Japanese Americans carry trauma from WWII internment camp
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For Japanese Americans imprisoned at Amache internment camp, lifetimes of silence and undeserved shame

By JUSTIN WINGERTER | The Denver Post | Published: May 20, 2021 GRANADA, Colo. (Tribune News Service) Fifteen miles from the Kansas border, Prowers County Road 23 1/2 comes to a dusty end, surrounded by sagebrush and prickly pear cacti and dead junipers. A place The Denver Post called, eight decades ago, as bleak a spot as one can find on the western plains. In one of the more shameful moments in American history, the federal government removed 120,000 Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals from their homes on the West Coast between 1942 and 1945 and imprisoned 10,000 over that timespan in far southeast Colorado, at a concentration camp it euphemistically named the Granada Relocation Center.

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4 Congressmen Join Colorado Teacher And Students To Make Camp Amache, A Japanese Internment Camp, A National Historic Site

4 Congressmen Join Colorado Teacher And Students To Make Camp Amache, A Japanese Internment Camp, A National Historic Site CBS Denver 2 hrs ago Syndicated Local – CBS Denver GRANADA, Colo. (CBS4) – More than 70 years after an internment camp in Colorado for Japanese people closed, it could become a national historic site and part of the National Park System. On a lonely dirt road east of Lamar, amid sagebrush and tumbleweeds, you find what is left of the Granada War Relocation Center, or Camp Amache as it became known to about 7,500 Japanese Americans in the 1940s. © Provided by CBS Denver (credit: CBS) Two thirds of them were U.S. citizens who after the attack on Pearl Harbor were forcibly removed from their homes by their own government and imprisoned. Decades later, Camp Amache has been virtually erased from the landscape, and, if not for a teacher and his students, might have been erased from history.

Four Congressmen Join Colorado Teacher & Students To Make a Japanese Internment Camp A National Historic Site

4 Congressmen Join Colorado Teacher And Students To Make Camp Amache, A Japanese Internment Camp, A National Historic Site CBS Denver 5/12/2021 Syndicated Local – CBS Denver GRANADA, Colo. (CBS4) – More than 70 years after an internment camp in Colorado for Japanese people closed, it could become a national historic site and part of the National Park System. On a lonely dirt road east of Lamar, amid sagebrush and tumbleweeds, you find what is left of the Granada War Relocation Center, or Camp Amache as it became known to about 7,500 Japanese Americans in the 1940s. © Provided by CBS Denver (credit: CBS) Two thirds of them were U.S. citizens who after the attack on Pearl Harbor were forcibly removed from their homes by their own government and imprisoned. Decades later, Camp Amache has been virtually erased from the landscape, and, if not for a teacher and his students, might have been erased from history.

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