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!["I don't regret having served at all," says Wilson Makabe. After a brief internment and work-release program, he enlisted in ...](http://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/aed1555a-9f19-11e3-ba8f-3fe1172d91db/419232_xgaplus.jpg)
![A place of sorrow lives on in the memories of Karl and Elaine Yoneda, who return each year for commemorative services at Manz...](http://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/bae7015a-9f19-11e3-ba9b-ad081c078dc9/419233_xgaplus.jpg)
A place of sorrow lives on in the memories of Karl and Elaine Yoneda, who return each year for commemorative services at Manzanar, now a historic landmark. Because she is Caucasian, Elaine could have remained at home when evacuation was ordered for Karl and couple's three-year-old son. But she demanded to go with her family to Manzanar.
Author: Michael Yamashita
©Michael Yamashita
Photo size: 17.5 Mpixels (50 MB uncompressed) - 5097x3429 pixels (17x11.4 in / 43.2x29 cm at 300 ppi)
Photo keywords: america, american, barbed wire, camp, consolation, couple, elderly, historic, husband, Japanese, Japanese Americans, man, Manzanar, old, United States of America, US, USA, wifre, woman
![A monument for those who died at Manzanar bears the Japanese symbols for consolation, soul, and tower.](http://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/7636e48a-9f19-11e3-9a3c-a1d58496592a/24756_xgaplus.jpg)
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