MANZANAR NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE, Calif. - As a 2-year-old girl forced to live at this former internment camp for Japanese-Americans during World War II, Iku Kiriyama recalls mostly "kid stuff" about the dark episode in American history. <br>
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"My only memory is of the Jello going into the hot rice," Kiriyama said. "Being a kid, it was like 'yuck."' <br>
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On Saturday, Kiriyama, 62, returned to the site tucked between the Sierra Nevada and Death Valley with 500 others -- many former detainees -- to mark the 60th anniversary of Executive Order No. 9066, which empowered federal agents to detain those deemed subversive during the war. <br>
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Some 120,000 Japanese-Americans were detained at 10 camps nationwide after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. At Manzanar, 10,000 people were interned for several years behind barbed wire. <br>
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Many of those at Manzanar on Saturday said they saw ominous parallels with people of Middle Eastern descent being detained after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. <br>
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"We have to stop that. There has to be a reason to put people in jail," said Archie Miyatake, whose late father, Toyo, smuggled camera equipment into the camp to secretly document life at Manzanar. <br>
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"He felt this was such an injustice for the Japanese people that he felt a responsibility to record camp life," Archie Miyatake said. <br>
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A retrospective of the elder Miyatake's images are on display at the nearby Eastern California Museum. <br>
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On Saturday, speakers took to a stage at Manzanar amid tumbleweeds and white-capped mountains to offer firsthand accounts of their experiences during the war. Others offered words of support to those who spent time at the camp. <br>
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Absent from the gathering was Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, author of a memoir titled, "Farewell to Manzanar." She said returning to the site of the former military barracks where she and 10,000 fellow Japanese-Americans lived for several years behind barbed wire is still too painful. <br>
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"It's very hard. I know a lot of people who can't go back," she said. <br>
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Instead, Houston, 67, participated in a reenactment of the 1942 roundup of Japanese-Americans. At the event in Watsonville, about 1,300 people reported to a government building, boarded old buses and were transported to an area where they were imprisoned behind metal gates. <br>
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Houston said it's important not to forget Manzanar. <br>
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"I hate to say it, we are kind of dying out, we internees," she said. "Let's keep doing it for those of us who can still remember." <br>
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