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Wyoming's Heart Mountain Relocation Camp: Imprisonment of Our Brothers

By Sage Frank, published Aug 29, 2007
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Maybe I'm just mad at the world lately, but I don't understand how people can go to Heart Mountain and say, "Wow, look what they have done". I went there and said, "This is all they've done?" How can anyone go to Heart Mountain and say that it was not a concentration camp? Did the Japanese-Americans ask to go here? While they where there were they Americans? I think not. Were they Japanese? No, they were "Japs", the enemy. They had their rights and freedoms taken away. They where forced to leave their homes, friends and lives.

Maybe it's because I grew up hearing stories from my Great Uncle Pue about living in a POW camp in Germany. At least he was there because he was fighting in a WAR. The Japanese-Americans that were forced in to these camps at: Amache, Colorado Gila River, Arkansas; Heart Mountain, Wyoming; Jerome, Arkansas; Manzanar, California; Minidoka, Idaho; Poston, Arizona; Rohwer, Arkansas; Topaz, Utah; and Tula Lake, California they "might" know something. Because they looked different, dressed different, and talked different, they were forced to live in a place that didn't feed them well, didn't house them well and were guarded by their countrymen who had orders to shoot them.

I don't know any American that would put up with that today. Yet we haven't done anything to help our fellow Americans that were put in such places. We think a cute little walkway and a few educational signs are the best we can do? I don't think so. We should rebuild a few of the houses that the "enemy" lived in and school children should spend a few days living there. Going there, walking around and getting back on a nice warm bus is not going to teach anyone anything. If you really want to make sure that this will never happen again, make the youth of today suffer a little. Make us live like our Japanese brothers and sisters had to live. Feed us 45-cents worth of food a day.

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