Standing at the edge of a quiet meadow ringed by forest and framed by the rolling green foothills of the Selkirk Mountains, I try to imagine the scene local guide Dave Fredrickson is building for me. Holding an old black-and-white photograph at arm’s length, he tilts it slightly, then gestures toward a distant ridge. “Over 260 internment shacks lined streets that ran in that direction,” he says. “There was the United Church, a Buddhist temple, s…
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