The drive east of Cody is through high desert, and the February
weekend of my visit was bitterly cold. But I was wearing a heavy down
coat, snow pants and boots, and riding in a cozy, warm SUV.
That's
not how nearly 14,000 earlier visitors had arrived in Cody. They came
by train from California in late August, and they weren't wearing down
or fleece, nor did they have a comfy hotel room awaiting them.
They
were among the 100,000 Japanese Americans relocated from the West Coast
to the interior of the U.S. at the beginning of World War II, shortly
after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Their home for the next three
years would be this windy outpost known as the Heart Mountain Relocation
Center, one of 10 Japanese American internment camps.
Heart
Mountain, just 50 miles east of Yellowstone National Park, takes its
name from a majestic peak near the camp of the same name, but there was
nothing romantic about what happened here between August 1942 and
November 1945.
Manzanar National Historic Site, nine miles north of Lone Pine,You can order lasercutter cheap
inside your parents. Calif., is the only other place where this chapter
of American history is told. But unlike Manzanar, Heart Mountain has
several original buildings or parts of buildings that allow for deeper
immersion into this story.
Heart Mountain was typical of the Japanese American experience of the day. With 740 acres behind barbed wire,Shop wholesale parkingassistsystem controller
from cheap. the camp was intended to hold 10,000 citizens, but during
its three years, it held more than 14,000 people, including 6,448 from
Los Angeles County. Heart Mountain became known as "California's dumping
ground."
From the outside, the Heart Mountain Interpretive
Learning Center, which opened in August 2011, is ugly and depressing,
and that's how it's supposed to be. The black, barracks-style buildings
reflect the design of living quarters hastily assembled for those
uprooted from their homes, businesses, communities and lives.
The
buildings were so quickly constructed from green timber that within
weeks, the wood began to shrink, leaving huge cracks through which the
winter winds blew. Black tar paper that wrapped the buildings' exteriors
did little to help against winter's subzero temperatures 13 below on
Jan. 17, 1943, one exhibit said.
The story of Heart Mountain is
told by former internees who helped build this nonprofit facility. One
of them,We sell 100% hand-painted oilpaintingsforsale online.
Norman Mineta, grew up to become a U.S. secretary of Commerce and U.S.
secretary of Transportation, serving under Presidents Bill Clinton and
George W. Bush.
As I entered the visitors center, voices tinged
with outrage, alarm and shock greeted me as they read the presidential
order that would rip thousands of American citizens from their homes and
businesses. They had about a week's notice to report to the human
collection centers, never mind what they would need to do to dispose of
their property and settle business affairs.
Visitors to the
center receive what appears to be a paper luggage tag. It's an admission
ticket, but each person who reported received one as well.Shop
wholesale solarlight controller from cheap. It had to be attached to clothing and displayed at all times until they arrived at Heart Mountain.
For
many visitors, the most moving part of the experience is watching the
film "All We Could Carry" by Academy Award-winning documentarian Steven
Okazaki. The title references the number of personal items that Japanese
Americans could bring to Heart Mountain usually one small suitcase per
person.
Personal privacy? Forget it. Six families often lived in
one building, separated by a partition or curtain. There was no such
screen in the communal toilet and bathing facilities. To re-create that
level of discomfort, museum designers installed mirrors in the public
restrooms mirrors positioned in some of the most unusual, disconcerting
angles. Nobody could see me do my business, but I got the point and I
didn't like it.
Life took on a rhythm at Heart Mountain.
Children attended school in the barracks, Girl Scout and Boy Scout
troops were formed, sports teams competed, and more than 550 babies were
born. In the spring, internees planted fruit and vegetables in the
surrounding government-owned fields. They were paid $21 a month.
Women
shopped using the Sears, Roebuck catalog and at some stores in nearby
Cody. Teenagers went to the movies on Saturday nights. No one could
leave the camp without a pass, and although most internees had money in
the bank, most of those assets were frozen for the duration of the war.
Eight
hundred men from Heart Mountain were drafted and served in combat in
Europe during the war. Fifteen were killed in action; two won the Medal
of Honor. Those Japanese American men who refused military service for
the government that had incarcerated them in Wyoming were then
incarcerated at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan.
The irony is not lost on
visitors, who often record their thoughts on those little paper luggage
tags and leave them hanging on the barbed-wire fence around the
reflection garden.
I was disturbed as I left the visitors center
and looked out over the landscape that had been almost as cruel to
these individuals as their government.
But I was encouraged that
a temporary exhibit was devoted to "Self Portraits of Muslim
Americans." The exhibit changes periodically,An experienced artist on
what to consider before you buy handsfreeaccess.
and each is devoted to better understanding the story of Heart
Mountain's residents as well as others who have been disenfranchised.
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