In-person Pilgrimage

Images from Amache Pilgrimage

50th Annual Amache Pilgrimage was May 16-18, 2025

Pilgrimages to former WWII concentration camps for those of Japanese descent were started in the late 1960s. It took nearly a quarter century for former prisoners and their descendants to question why they had been imprisoned and begin searching for answers. The first formal pilgrimage to Amache was one of the official events commemorating the state of Colorado’s centennial from 1975-76, which coincided with the United States bicentennial celebration. After pilgrims arrived at Amache, they cleaned the cemetery site. Learn more on the Pilgrimage History page. Since then, the annual Pilgrimage has taken place on the weekend before Memorial Day weekend for the past 50 years. While it was originally limited to only Saturday, in recent years it has grown to a longer event.

This year, Nikkeijin Kai continued the tradition of a Saturday bus for a one-day pilgrimage from Denver. In addition to the longstanding memorial at the cemetery and pot luck lunch, events were coordinated on Friday afternoon through Sunday morning by Amache Alliance, the University of Denver Amache Project, National Parks Conservation Association, Colorado Preservation Inc., and the Sand Creek Massacre Foundation. Amache Preservation Society and Amache National Historical Site graciously hosted and provided additional support throughout the weekend.

Highlights included:

  • Obon dancing in the Granada HS auditorium. Photo courtesy Kirsten Leong, Amache Alliance.

    Obon dancing at Granada HS

  • Block 10E family barrack tour. Photo courtesy Kirsten Leong, Amache Alliance.

    Block 10E families

  • Standing in our family barracks. Photo courtesy Kirsten Leong, Amache Alliance.

    Standing in our family barracks

  • Amache and Sand Creek Massacre Youth Ambassadors and families, Amache Preservation Society, and NPS. Photo courtesy Bobbie Kite.

    Youth Ambassadors and families, APS, and NPS

  • Incarceration survivors at the Granada High School. Photo courtesy Charlene Tonai Din.

    Incarceration survivors

  • Origami cranes made by Amache pilgrims at the Sand Creek Massacre NHS repatriation area. Photo courtesy Charlene Tonai Din.

    Amache cranes at Sand Creek Massacre NHS

  • Amache survivors stamp the Ireichō at the cemetery while names are of those who died at Amache are read by Duncan Ryuken Williams. Photo courtesy Kirsten Leong, Amache Alliance.

    Amache survivors stamping the Ireichō

  • Amache x Sand Creek Massacre Youth Ambassador Program accepting the 2025 Starburst Award for Excellence in Use of Lottery Funds from the Colorado Lottery. Photo courtesy Kirsten Leong, Amache Alliance.

    Youth Ambassadors accept 2025 Starburst Award

 

We hope to continue the multi-day format into the future. Next year will be the Semiquincentennial of the United States, marking 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence. We will update this page once planning for the 2026 Amache Pilgrimage begins.


News Coverage from Recent Pilgrimages

2024 Pilgrimage weekend
2023 Pilgrimage weekend
Colorado Sun: Descendants of two government-sanctioned atrocities gather in Colorado, bond over “shared identity”

The 2023 Pilgrimage included an exchange with Sand Creek Massacre descendants. Read more in an article in the Colorado Sun.

2022 Pilgrimage
9News: Survivors, descendants and families make pilgrimage to Amache

9News.com attended the Pilgrimage and produced a 30 minute special “Injustice Forever: the Story of Amache”, which aired on Sunday June 26, 2022. It tells the story of Amache and what will likely to happen to the site once the National Park Service is running it. View the 2:50 minute overview video on 9News.com, or watch the full special.

9News: Pilgrimage to Amache Returns

9News.com also interviewed Derek Okubo, Director of the Denver Agency for Human Rights and Amache descendant. View the 5 minute video on 9News.com.

Colorado Public Radio: The Camp Amache rose is blooming. Here’s what it looks like

A rose bush planted by Amache incarcerees was witnessed blooming for the first time in almost 80 years at the Pilgrimage. Learn more about the discovery of the Amache rose, propagation of cuttings at the Denver Botanic Gardens, and view footage of the bloom on CPR news.

The Prowers Journal: Historic Amache Pilgrimage

Read a brief overview of the main Pilgrimage events by The Prowers Journal.

KRDO: Remembering Amache, the story of Colorado’s WWII Japanese internment camp

KRDO produced a short video and StoryMap of the Pilgrimage, featuring an interviews with Amache survivor Bob Fuchigami and APS lead John Hopper.