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Friends of Minidoka
About
Board of Directors
Minidoka National Historic Site
History
Careers + Internships
Minidoka Team
Events
News
Subscribe to e-updates
Recent News
Past Newsletters
The Irrigator
Blog
2021 Annual Report
Media Coverage
A Year in Review: 2024 and Looking Ahead 2025
Press
Press Kit - Response to Lava Ridge Final EIS
Press Kit - Out There
Press Kit - Kishi Bashi
Press Kit - Mellon Foundation Grant
Press Kit - Betrayed FIlm
Press Kit - 11 Most Endangered
Projects
Out There: A National Parks Story – Idaho Tour
Beyond the Barbed Wire
2025 Day of Remembrance
2024 Day of Remembrance Images
Nisei Trials
Love in the Library Video
Lava Ridge Wind Project
Betrayed Films and Lesson Plans
Dr. Robert C. Sims Community Education Fund
Accomplishments
Youth in Focus: Online Exhibit
Past Projects
STORE
Contact
Donate
Folder: About
Back
Board of Directors
Minidoka National Historic Site
History
Careers + Internships
Minidoka Team
Events
Folder: News
Back
Subscribe to e-updates
Recent News
Past Newsletters
The Irrigator
Blog
2021 Annual Report
Media Coverage
A Year in Review: 2024 and Looking Ahead 2025
Folder: Press
Back
Press Kit - Response to Lava Ridge Final EIS
Press Kit - Out There
Press Kit - Kishi Bashi
Press Kit - Mellon Foundation Grant
Press Kit - Betrayed FIlm
Press Kit - 11 Most Endangered
Folder: Projects
Back
Out There: A National Parks Story – Idaho Tour
Beyond the Barbed Wire
2025 Day of Remembrance
2024 Day of Remembrance Images
Nisei Trials
Love in the Library Video
Lava Ridge Wind Project
Betrayed Films and Lesson Plans
Dr. Robert C. Sims Community Education Fund
Accomplishments
Youth in Focus: Online Exhibit
Past Projects
STORE
Contact
Donate
STORE Minidoka National Historic Site
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Minidoka National Historic Site

$23.99

By Hanako Wakatsuki-Chong, Mia Russell and Carol Ash

In the vast sagebrush desert of Southern Idaho, Minidoka War Relocation Center had a short-lived and painful existence. The wartime operation incarcerated over 13,000 American citizens and legal resident aliens of Japanese ancestry from August 1942 to October 1945. They were forcibly removed from their homes along the West Coast--primarily from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska--as a result of Executive Order 9066, signed by President Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. Their only crime was looking like the enemy. For three years, the men, women, and children endured uncertainty, created community, and demonstrated resilience, creativity, and patriotism. Today, Minidoka National Historic Site protects the legacy of the incarceration history and its important lessons in civil liberties. Paperback.

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By Hanako Wakatsuki-Chong, Mia Russell and Carol Ash

In the vast sagebrush desert of Southern Idaho, Minidoka War Relocation Center had a short-lived and painful existence. The wartime operation incarcerated over 13,000 American citizens and legal resident aliens of Japanese ancestry from August 1942 to October 1945. They were forcibly removed from their homes along the West Coast--primarily from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska--as a result of Executive Order 9066, signed by President Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. Their only crime was looking like the enemy. For three years, the men, women, and children endured uncertainty, created community, and demonstrated resilience, creativity, and patriotism. Today, Minidoka National Historic Site protects the legacy of the incarceration history and its important lessons in civil liberties. Paperback.

By Hanako Wakatsuki-Chong, Mia Russell and Carol Ash

In the vast sagebrush desert of Southern Idaho, Minidoka War Relocation Center had a short-lived and painful existence. The wartime operation incarcerated over 13,000 American citizens and legal resident aliens of Japanese ancestry from August 1942 to October 1945. They were forcibly removed from their homes along the West Coast--primarily from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska--as a result of Executive Order 9066, signed by President Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. Their only crime was looking like the enemy. For three years, the men, women, and children endured uncertainty, created community, and demonstrated resilience, creativity, and patriotism. Today, Minidoka National Historic Site protects the legacy of the incarceration history and its important lessons in civil liberties. Paperback.

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