Amache Remembered: Unearthing Stories, Cultivating Legacy

by | Apr 23, 2025

A Japanese garden scene featuring a traditional rock arrangement, including a stone pagoda structure stacked with multiple flat rocks. The area is surrounded by large natural stones, lush green pine trees with carefully pruned branches, and a grassy landscape. In the background, modern glass buildings and construction cranes contrast with the serene, traditional setting. Some trees have protective straw wrappings around their trunks.

In this special episode of the NAJGA podcast, hosts Jan Liverance and Marisa Rodriguez are joined by two remarkable guests—Dr. Bonnie Clark and Greg Kitajima—for a moving conversation about gardens, resilience, and the enduring legacy of Amache.

A Japanese garden scene featuring a traditional rock arrangement, including a stone pagoda structure stacked with multiple flat rocks. The area is surrounded by large natural stones, lush green pine trees with carefully pruned branches, and a grassy landscape. In the background, modern glass buildings and construction cranes contrast with the serene, traditional setting. Some trees have protective straw wrappings around their trunks.

Clockwise from Lower Right: Guard Tower at Amache, the World War II Japanese American incarceration camp in Colorado, Barracks at Amache, Map of Amache, Team during Amache Community Archeology Project.  

About our Guests:

Dr. Bonnie Clark is professor and curator for archaeology in the University of Denver’s Anthropology Department. Since 2005, her primary research focus has been the Amache Community Archaeology Project, a collaborative endeavor committed to preserving, researching, and interpreting the tangible remains of Amache, the World War II Japanese American incarceration camp in Colorado. She is author of Finding Solace in the Soil, coeditor of Archaeological Landscapes on the High Plains, and coauthor of Denver: An Archaeological History.

Greg Kitajima is an independent Certified Aesthetic Pruner based in Santa Barbara, and currently serves on the board of the Amache Alliance. He spent 14 years pruning and maintaining the Japanese Garden at Ganna Walska Lotusland, apprenticing for eight of those years under Frank Fujii—the garden’s original designer and caretaker for 45 years. In addition to his training at Lotusland, Greg has also studied Japanese gardens and pine pruning in Japan, and has trained with Dennis Makishima on the art of Aesthetic Pruning.

A collage of four images depicting archaeological fieldwork and community engagement. Top left: Two women in sun hats and long sleeves stand at a soil sifting station in a grassy field, smiling at the camera. Top right: A person in a straw hat carefully brushes soil away from an excavation unit marked with string lines. Bottom left: Two people crouch on the ground, working intently at an excavation site, one using a small hand tool and the other observing. Bottom right: Inside a wooden structure, a young woman in a sunhat speaks with two older women, seated.

Clockwise from Lower Right: Martha Kitajima and Naomi Goto, Greg Kitajima’s mom and aunt, with Amache Community Archeology Project volunteer, ACAP participants participating in archeological research.

Together, they paint a vivid picture of Amache’s landscape, past and present—sharing stories of discovery, reflection, and the power of place. From archaeological fieldwork to family narratives and garden traditions, this episode invites listeners to consider why the legacy of Amache still matters, and how we continue to carry these stories forward.

A Japanese garden scene featuring a traditional rock arrangement, including a stone pagoda structure stacked with multiple flat rocks. The area is surrounded by large natural stones, lush green pine trees with carefully pruned branches, and a grassy landscape. In the background, modern glass buildings and construction cranes contrast with the serene, traditional setting. Some trees have protective straw wrappings around their trunks.

Clockwise from Right: Dr. Bonnie Clark, Greg Kitajima, and Amache Community Archeology Project volunteers participating in archeological research.

All photos courtesy of Bonnie Clark and Greg Kitajima. No unauthorized duplication allowed.