海角大神

Preserved by students, WWII internment camp becomes national park

|
Sarah Matusek/海角大神
Amache, a Japanese American internment camp that held over 10,000 people of Japanese ancestry during World War II, was designated in March as part of the National Park System. In the nearby town of Granada, Colorado, students have volunteered to help preserve the site for nearly three decades.

The wind sings a wordless song across the Colorado plains, making acres sway. Out of the brush rise concrete remains of a camp that imprisoned over 10,000 people.

Carlene Tanigoshi Tinker, a toddler during World War II, lived at this Japanese American internment camp, called Amache. She sat atop her father鈥檚 shoulders with a scarf around her face 鈥撎齛 shield against wind-whipped sand 鈥撎齛s they lined up outside for food. Her parents were United States citizens.

After their release, stigma followed her to Denver, she says, where kids would pelt her with rocks after school. For the rest of her childhood, Amache was 鈥渁 topic that we never discussed,鈥 remembers Ms. Tinker, a retired biology teacher living in California. 鈥淚 think it was a painful experience.鈥澨

Why We Wrote This

Who鈥檚 responsible for preserving regrettable parts of United States history? For years, Colorado students have answered the call.

Last month, President Joe Biden Amache as a national park, but for some it was, in essence, already serving as one. For years, camp survivors and descendants have visited the site that once confined their families, welcomed by a local educator in the nearby town of Granada.

Over almost 30 years, John Hopper, dean of students at Granada School District RE-1, and hundreds of his pupils have helped preserve the rural site and run a museum in Granada. Their sense of civic responsibility has built bonds across cultures and generations, transcending a dark chapter of American history.

鈥淚t鈥檚 taught me a lot about empathy,鈥 says Bailey Hernandez, a junior. 鈥淵ou start to think, well, how would I have reacted if my family was forced into one of these camps?

One of his predecessors toured Ms. Tinker around Amache in 2004, her first trip back. She remembers feeling uplifted.

鈥淭hese kids are really, really amazing to be so dedicated,鈥 says Ms. Tinker. 鈥淭hey know how important it is and they want to preserve this story.鈥澨

Courtesy of Carlene Tanigoshi Tinker
Amache survivor Carlene Tanigoshi Tinker stands in front of a restored recreation building in 2021 where she attended preschool while her family was interned in the 1940s in Prowers County, Colorado.

Civilian suspects

Two months after the December 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Franklin Roosevelt signed . That led to the forced removal of more than 100,000 people of Japanese ancestry from their homes into internment camps. Amache, one of 10 such sites, was originally called the Granada Relocation Center and ran between 1942 and 1945.

On the rattlesnake-ridden plains of southeast Colorado, Amache mostly held American citizens 鈥 who were seen as potential enemies and subjected to loyalty questionnaires. In spite of these conditions, internees beautified their arid captivity by planting trees and gardens,听even creating a pond.听

The U.S. government under Ronald Reagan formally in 1988; reparations checks followed. And now with last month鈥檚 signing of the , oversight of the property will transition to the National Park Service.

That鈥檚 welcome news to Mr. Hopper, for whom all things Amache are a daily responsibility.

AP/File
Housing barracks at the Amache internment center near Granada, Colorado, where Japanese Americans were relocated during World War II, June 21, 1943. Despite the situation, internees beautified their arid captivity by planting trees and gardens, even creating a pond.

For the students听

Despite being recognized for his work 鈥撎齣ncluding praise from the consul general of Japan in Denver 鈥撎齅r. Hopper says he prefers to 鈥渂e on the sidelines鈥 and center his students.

鈥淚t is a heavy, heavy topic, especially when you talk about civil liberties,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 part of my job I enjoy talking about 鈥 needs to be talked about.鈥

Mr. Hopper, who does not have Japanese ancestry, first visited Amache as a new Granada high school social studies teacher in 1990.

鈥淚t just looked like a sagebrush cactus hill with cattle on it,鈥 he recalls.

In 1993, some 鈥渞eally bright and willing students鈥 wanted to pursue an Amache project and began interviewing a survivor whom Mr. Hopper鈥檚 family knew. That year the teacher established the nonprofit (APS). What began as extracurricular activities eventually formalized into a class. Collaboration with survivors, descendants, and the town, and partnership with groups like the Amache Club and Amache Historical Society, have been key to building trust.

Over the years, students have divided their time between physical preservation of the site 鈥 mowing or renovating a cemetery or other landmarks 鈥 and interpretive efforts. APS students present to other schools and groups, and help keep up the Amache Museum, where they double as docents.听

Sarah Matusek/海角大神
A reconstructed guard tower stands watch over the site of a former Japanese American internment camp, Amache, in Prowers County, Colorado, March 24, 2022. Amache mostly held American citizens 鈥 who were seen as potential enemies and subjected to loyalty questionnaires.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 think of any group that does more for Amache,鈥 says Calvin Taro Hada, an Amache descendant and president of the Nikkeijin Kai of Colorado, a Japanese American organization.听

Amache, whose land is owned by the town, became a national historic landmark in 2006. Two years later, APS students began working on-site with the University of Denver, which leads archaeology projects through summer field schools there and teaches high schoolers conservation skills like object handling.

鈥淭he first time I ever saw John鈥檚 kids give a presentation, ... I thought, OK, this is what this is all about,鈥 says Bonnie Clark, an anthropology professor at the University of Denver and leader of the . 鈥淭hey are super engaged,鈥 she adds.

When Mr. Hopper retires, he plans to pass the mantle of APS leadership to social studies teacher Tanner Grasmick, who joined APS as a high schooler.听

The teacher credits his experience as one of Mr. Hopper鈥檚 students as the reason he became an educator himself.听

鈥淵ou hear what they had to go through, the adversities that they had to face, and for them to come back and just be so grateful [for the preservation efforts], ... it鈥檚 amazing,鈥 says Mr. Grasmick.

The teacher from a farming family says he still corresponds with his Japanese host mother, years after a trip abroad where he and peers gave presentations. Before the pandemic, APS members would travel to Japan every other year and often stay with host families.

No longer the enemy

On a March morning in Granada, Bailey wears a gray-black varsity jacket for some high school sports team 鈥 or so it seems. A closer look reveals a stitched image of an internment camp barrack. It鈥檚 part of his APS tour guide outfit at the Amache Museum.听

Sarah Matusek/海角大神
High schooler Bailey Hernandez leads a tour of the Amache Museum in Granada, Colorado, for visitor Gene Bonventre, March 25, 2022.

He passes through exhibits of the staged interior of a barrack, a carved gourd decorated with seeds, a military uniform.

鈥淥ut of all the camps, we actually have the highest volunteer rate鈥 for internees joining the U.S.听military, says Bailey.

His eyes widen as he speaks, as if each retelling of facts fascinates him afresh. By the tour鈥檚 end, Bailey has impressed guest Gene Bonventre.

He seemed to really know his stuff and be enthusiastic about it, too,鈥 says Dr. Bonventre, retired from the Air Force. 鈥淭hat made the museum visit a lot more special.鈥

The visitor says he鈥檚 headed to Amache next, about a mile and a half away. Ms. Tinker plans to return there soon to participate in the DU Amache Project field school 鈥 her seventh summer.听听

How might her parents react to her digging in the dirt, alongside students, excavating memories that many families spent years trying to repress?听

鈥淲e are no longer seen as the enemy,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey would see that as gratifying.鈥

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Preserved by students, WWII internment camp becomes national park
Read this article in
/World/Making-a-difference/2022/0405/Preserved-by-students-WWII-internment-camp-becomes-national-park
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe