Few people willingly return to their old prison, but 92-year-old Sam Mihara did. He doesn't want people to forget what happened at Heart Mountain, a Japanese internment camp in Wyoming. Ian Lee reports.
Breakdown
- Sam Mahara, a 92-year-old survivor, returns to Heart Mountain to share his family's experiences during internment. 34s
- Mahara's family was forced from San Francisco to Wyoming, where they lost their home and his grandfather died. 51s
- Over 120,000 Japanese-Americans, many of them citizens, were interned in camps across the U.S. 1m 15s
- Retired judge Lance Ito explains how his family's internment influenced his legal career. 1m 43s
- President Ronald Reagan formally apologized for the internment in 1988, and Mahara now lectures on the importance of constitutional rights. 2m 4s