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Minidoka internment camp opens visitor center

Credit: (KING)
Minidoka internment camp in Idaho.

EDEN, Idaho - Visitors to the Minidoka War Relocation Center in southern Idaho will get a closer sense of what life was like for thousands of Japanese Americans forced to live at the internment camp during World War II now that a new visitor center has opened at the site.

Hanako Wakatsuki, chief interpreter for the Minidoka National Historic Site, told The Times-News that the visitor center has on-site staff for the first time since the National Park Service began developing the location. Now visitors can take guided tours or walk through the camp on their own.

MORE: Prisoners in Their Own Land: Minidoka

The internment camp incarcerated 13,000 people of Japanese heritage between 1942 and 1945. Two-thirds of them were American citizens, and half of them were children. All were living in Oregon, Washington state and Alaska when they were forced to live at the camp.


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