05/20/2026
May is an important month at Minidoka National Historic Site. On May 1, we opened our visitor center for the season and began observing Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.
This month offers an opportunity to honor the diverse histories, cultures, and communities of AANHPI people in Idaho and across the United States. It also invites reflection on the experiences of the approximately 13,000 people of Japanese ancestry who were unjustly incarcerated at Minidoka during World War II. Despite forced removal and confinement, many demonstrated resilience, building community, sustaining families, and contributing their labor in southern Idaho and beyond.
AANHPI people have played a profoundly important role in American and Idaho history. Here at Minidoka, many incarcerees helped transform the high desert of southern Idaho into arable, productive farmland. They worked at farm labor camps in Kooskia, Rupert, Shelly, and Paul and helped to build the Anderson Ranch Dam. The contributions of Minidoka incarcerees were vital to the development of Idaho’s agriculture industry, which remains a top sector of the state’s economy.
We invite you to explore the stories preserved at Minidoka and throughout the National Park System, representing people with roots in India, China, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, Vietnam, Hawaiʻi, Samoa, Tonga, and many other nations and Pacific communities. Learn more at Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage (U.S. National Park Service).