Thursday, September 23, 2010
A final word
Departure day - Wearing ceremonial marmars
It has been over two months since I returned to the U.S and I thought I should post a final blog entry. As many of you who know me on a personal level know, concerns about my in-laws health led Wenonoa and I to return to the U.S earlier than expected.
Our last days on the island were filled with both excitement at beginning a new chapter of our lives and sadness over leaving so many close friends. Micronesia is located in the middle of the Pacific somewhat near the edge of the world; it is not a place one might find oneself passing through on the way to somewhere else. Thus, as we looked at the island from the window of the departing plane, we knew it might be our last glimpse of Micronesia.
My first day back I gained an appreciation for what Dorothy must have felt upon waking up post-tornado in her bed in Kansas. I woke up in a Seattle airport hotel room feeling as though the whole Micronesian experience must have been a dream. The Seattle airport had a bookstore (which Micronesia doesn’t) and more dining choices than the whole island of Pohnpei had. Flipping through the channels on the hotel TV and salivating over all the menu choices on the area delivery dining guide it seemed unreal that the last year and half of my life was spent on a quiet little island just over 100 sq. miles in size that lacked so many of the amenities we take for granted.
The next few days back continued to fill us with awe and appreciation. On our first trip to a supermarket we must have appeared to the other shoppers to be recent refugees. We just stared and pointed in disbelief. Never before had tomatoes appeared so big, so red, and so bountiful. The same held true for almost every other fruit and vegetable in the produce section.
Conversely, our waltz down the seafood section was shocking and disappointing. Having gotten use to paying $2 a pound for fresh tuna the amounts being charged for tuna, salmon, and all other fish seemed like pure robbery. Our sashimi days are gone!
As exciting as the supermarket was, my first driving experience was equally as terrifying. Having gotten use to speeds that seldom exceed 30 mph, my fingers tightly squeezed the steering wheel as I accelerated up to 60 mph during my first entry onto the freeway. I can’t recall 60 mph ever feeling so fast and I was certain that death was near. With so many cars flying by and changing lanes I was almost certain that one un-attentive driver either dialing his/her cell phone, sending a text, changing a CD or lighting a smoke would drift into the next lane and an ensuing 50 car pile would result. To my delight and disbelief, we made it off the freeway with no unfortunate mishaps and for the next few days my speed and comfort increases. I am no longer fazed by the freeways and nor expect to see chickens crossing the road.
Of the questions I am asked, two are repeated frequently, “Are you glad you went; are you glad your back?” To the first, the answer is an unequivocal YES for many reasons. To live somewhere else among a culture that doesn’t view the world we do is a wonderful learning experience. To live a different lifestyle provides an opportunity to re-examine our approach to life. For those and many other reasons, especially the friendships I made, I am most definitely glad we went.
To answer the question as to whether I’m glad to be back causes me to stop and pause. I can say this – Life for me was fun in Micronesia – Tuesday night was ultimate Frisbee, Wednesday poker, Saturday scubadiving, and Saturday night bridge night. We worked until 5pm and then responsibilities ended and playtime began. It was fun but it wasn’t always comfortable.
85 degree weather complimented by 85% humidity is not always pleasant, especially if the apt. only has just one window air conditioner. To put it one way, in America housecleaning involves dusting, in Micronesia it involved wiping off the mold that grew basically everywhere. No joke, one night we opened up the box of a board game that had lay unused for a few months and found that mold had started to grow on the playing board.
I can’t really answer the question. I’m back. Certainly I enjoy the creature comforts, the culinary options, the cultural opportunities that are here and I miss what I miss from there. The ending of each chapter leads to the beginning of a new chapter. Without knowing where this chapter will end or how the next will begin, I can’t even begin to ponder whether I’m glad to be back. When asked whether I’m glad to be back I just shrug. After all, to borrow Popey’s famous line, “I y’am what I y’am...”
Friday, July 9, 2010
Machettes
When I get back to the states, I want to walk down my street shirtless and shoeless, carrying a machette. I’d imagine it would turn a few heads and cause people to make sure their doors are locked and car windows rolled up. Here, the sight is nothing to blink at. It is something I see almost daily on my drive to work.
Machettes are an all-purpose general utility here, sort of the Micronesian version of a pocket knife. Only they don’t fit in a pocket so people, old and young, walk around carrying them to open coconuts, cut down some bananas, and for various other purposes.
The commonness of machettes makes for a few amusing anecdotes worth sharing….
An Australian woman told Wenonoa that when her son was turning seven she asked him what he would like for his birthday. The answer of course – a machette. Some of his classmates had them so he wanted one too. As they were to be relocating soon after his birthday she had to explain to him that it wouldn’t be an appropriate gift for him.
The Aussies live on their own compound, complete with a gardener. One day some other Aussie children, ages 4 and 6, were playing in the yard and for some reason or another required the use of a machette. They asked the gardener if they could use his and being an accomodating individual, he kindly let them borrow it. The mother happened to look out her window and saw her kids using it. She had to explain to him that menwei children aren’t smart about things like using machettes and that the boys would hurt themselves.
It is true. The local kids are adept at using machettes as American kids are at using Gameboys. I often have to ask my 12-year old neigbor friend to open my coconuts for me. I have to hack and hack at it, but he can get one open in seconds.
The most recent 5K fun run was sponsored by Island Food Community. Better known as Go Local, Island Food is a local non-profit that promotes the use of indigenous foods. Rather than giving away prizes of rice and ramen, instead the prizes were intended to promote use of local resources for the production of food. When the Girls 12 and Under category winner was announced she walked to the podium and received a garden shovel. The 12 and Under winning boy was presented with a machette.
A female American friend immediately got upset about the gender difference in prizes; girls get shovels and boys get machettes. I had to laugh because, having all been here a while, none of us gave a second thought to the idea of a machette as being a suitable prize for a 12 and under category, regardless of gender.
Machettes are an all-purpose general utility here, sort of the Micronesian version of a pocket knife. Only they don’t fit in a pocket so people, old and young, walk around carrying them to open coconuts, cut down some bananas, and for various other purposes.
The commonness of machettes makes for a few amusing anecdotes worth sharing….
An Australian woman told Wenonoa that when her son was turning seven she asked him what he would like for his birthday. The answer of course – a machette. Some of his classmates had them so he wanted one too. As they were to be relocating soon after his birthday she had to explain to him that it wouldn’t be an appropriate gift for him.
The Aussies live on their own compound, complete with a gardener. One day some other Aussie children, ages 4 and 6, were playing in the yard and for some reason or another required the use of a machette. They asked the gardener if they could use his and being an accomodating individual, he kindly let them borrow it. The mother happened to look out her window and saw her kids using it. She had to explain to him that menwei children aren’t smart about things like using machettes and that the boys would hurt themselves.
It is true. The local kids are adept at using machettes as American kids are at using Gameboys. I often have to ask my 12-year old neigbor friend to open my coconuts for me. I have to hack and hack at it, but he can get one open in seconds.
The most recent 5K fun run was sponsored by Island Food Community. Better known as Go Local, Island Food is a local non-profit that promotes the use of indigenous foods. Rather than giving away prizes of rice and ramen, instead the prizes were intended to promote use of local resources for the production of food. When the Girls 12 and Under category winner was announced she walked to the podium and received a garden shovel. The 12 and Under winning boy was presented with a machette.
A female American friend immediately got upset about the gender difference in prizes; girls get shovels and boys get machettes. I had to laugh because, having all been here a while, none of us gave a second thought to the idea of a machette as being a suitable prize for a 12 and under category, regardless of gender.
Friday, June 25, 2010
A random thought about the positives of life on the island
Two cars were parked at the side of the intersection on my way to work the other day. Passing by, it looked as though there had been a fender bender. It dawned on me that this was the first accident scene I had driven by in the year and half I’ve been here. By contrast, an ‘intersection accident’ was something I passed weekly, if not daily, in Phoenix. In Oregon, accidents were less common but certainly not rare.
As an ex-pat, I’ve noticed that the things we miss from home come up in conversation much more than the things we are happy to escape from. Similarly, my blog entries may have discussed the negatives more than the positives but there are plenty of positives about living here.
It has been nice living a life that doesn’t include the omnipresent stress, fear and annoyances that are part of everyday life in the U.S. Driving here is stress free and the rate of speed so slow that there is little fear of getting seriously hurt in a car accident. The constant sound of car alarms and cell phones which in the states had turned me into a Grinch-like creature grimasing the words “noise, noise, noise” is gone. The bombardment of advertising and telemarketing simply doesn’t exist. In fact, advertising isn’t really needed at all. When a ship arrives and grocery store is restocked, word gets around.
There is minimal crime on the island and less acts of random violence. Without the media coverage that exists in the U.S. the crime that does occur here doesn’t result in a culture of fear. In fact, fear is replaced by friendliness. As one longtime ex-pat remarked to me, living here he has gotten use to chatting with strangers. When he goes to the states and out of habit starts to strike up a conversation with a random stranger, he is treated with suspicion and mistrust. Parents don’t worry that their children will be abducted and kids in first or second grade can safely walk to school or the corner store alone.
As an ex-pat, I’ve noticed that the things we miss from home come up in conversation much more than the things we are happy to escape from. Similarly, my blog entries may have discussed the negatives more than the positives but there are plenty of positives about living here.
It has been nice living a life that doesn’t include the omnipresent stress, fear and annoyances that are part of everyday life in the U.S. Driving here is stress free and the rate of speed so slow that there is little fear of getting seriously hurt in a car accident. The constant sound of car alarms and cell phones which in the states had turned me into a Grinch-like creature grimasing the words “noise, noise, noise” is gone. The bombardment of advertising and telemarketing simply doesn’t exist. In fact, advertising isn’t really needed at all. When a ship arrives and grocery store is restocked, word gets around.
There is minimal crime on the island and less acts of random violence. Without the media coverage that exists in the U.S. the crime that does occur here doesn’t result in a culture of fear. In fact, fear is replaced by friendliness. As one longtime ex-pat remarked to me, living here he has gotten use to chatting with strangers. When he goes to the states and out of habit starts to strike up a conversation with a random stranger, he is treated with suspicion and mistrust. Parents don’t worry that their children will be abducted and kids in first or second grade can safely walk to school or the corner store alone.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Weno - A study of contrasts
Written on a recent trip to Weno, the main island of Chuuk State.
The beauty of Weno lies not on the land but on top of and beneath the lagoon that spreads out below and before me. In front of me clouds rise from the horizon in multi-hued brilliance like a canyon wall closing off the outside world. They lay, one on top of another, stacked from the sea to the sky in all shades of blue and grey during the twilight hour. Westward, the sun lingers somewhere behind the wall of clouds. A few strong rays penetrate a layer of clouds producing swirls of a pinkish salmon color that peak through blend with the blue-gray curtain of clouds.
I didn’t bring my camera on this trip and now wish I had. For the last three nights I have sat as the minutes passed by watching the horizon as the sky changed from blue to black. On past trips to Weno I had brought my camera but the lense only focused on the road. Rainfilled potholes as deep as ditches are as prevelant as holes on a piece of Swiss cheese. Dirty water washes into and out of the potholes until the road is covered in a layer of slimy mud. The potoholes are so common and so deep that no one travels more than 15 miles per hour. Every few feet drivers brake so the car can gently roll into the ditchlike potholes. When possible, they turn into parking lots or the oncoming lane to avoide the holes. The joke on Weno is that the way you can tell if a person is driving drunk is if he is driving in a straight line.
When the road is behind me, beauty is in front. Between my 3rd floor hotel balcony and the clouds, the calm lagoon water sits. Digesting and reflecting the color, a purple hue spreads across the surface. The water, disturbed only when a small boats skims the water heading from Weno back to a lagoon island, produces the occasional ripple but otherwise is as still as the full moon at midnight.
Beneath the surface another type of beauty exists. Spread througout the lagoon are 40 Japanese ships sunk in battle during World War II. Nature and time have removed the ugliness of war and few remnants of battle remain. Brightly covered corral decorate the ship’s sides hiding the dull gray steel. Schools of fish now occupy the spaces where sailors once stood watch. They are peaceful, silent, and present everwhere. Their numbers suggest that the lagoon is healthy, vibrant, teeming with life.
Behind me, the opposite is true. There is nothing healthy looking on the island. Litter lines the streams feeding the lagoon. Abandoned cars rust and tin shacks rust on the side of the road and everything seems in need of a fresh coat of paint.
Weno – A study of contrasts.
The beauty of Weno lies not on the land but on top of and beneath the lagoon that spreads out below and before me. In front of me clouds rise from the horizon in multi-hued brilliance like a canyon wall closing off the outside world. They lay, one on top of another, stacked from the sea to the sky in all shades of blue and grey during the twilight hour. Westward, the sun lingers somewhere behind the wall of clouds. A few strong rays penetrate a layer of clouds producing swirls of a pinkish salmon color that peak through blend with the blue-gray curtain of clouds.
I didn’t bring my camera on this trip and now wish I had. For the last three nights I have sat as the minutes passed by watching the horizon as the sky changed from blue to black. On past trips to Weno I had brought my camera but the lense only focused on the road. Rainfilled potholes as deep as ditches are as prevelant as holes on a piece of Swiss cheese. Dirty water washes into and out of the potholes until the road is covered in a layer of slimy mud. The potoholes are so common and so deep that no one travels more than 15 miles per hour. Every few feet drivers brake so the car can gently roll into the ditchlike potholes. When possible, they turn into parking lots or the oncoming lane to avoide the holes. The joke on Weno is that the way you can tell if a person is driving drunk is if he is driving in a straight line.
When the road is behind me, beauty is in front. Between my 3rd floor hotel balcony and the clouds, the calm lagoon water sits. Digesting and reflecting the color, a purple hue spreads across the surface. The water, disturbed only when a small boats skims the water heading from Weno back to a lagoon island, produces the occasional ripple but otherwise is as still as the full moon at midnight.
Beneath the surface another type of beauty exists. Spread througout the lagoon are 40 Japanese ships sunk in battle during World War II. Nature and time have removed the ugliness of war and few remnants of battle remain. Brightly covered corral decorate the ship’s sides hiding the dull gray steel. Schools of fish now occupy the spaces where sailors once stood watch. They are peaceful, silent, and present everwhere. Their numbers suggest that the lagoon is healthy, vibrant, teeming with life.
Behind me, the opposite is true. There is nothing healthy looking on the island. Litter lines the streams feeding the lagoon. Abandoned cars rust and tin shacks rust on the side of the road and everything seems in need of a fresh coat of paint.
Weno – A study of contrasts.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Beware sleeping drunks
Not to long ago National Geographic had a one page article on unique warning and other signs from around the world. My favorite, a warning of deep crocodile-infested waters, pictured a wheelchair speeding down a ramp. Another, aimed at teaching rural residents the correct way of using a toilet, had a picture of a person squatting on top of a toilet seat with the universal diagonal red line across the sign.
If I were asked to design a unique roadside warning sign for Pohnpei, it would show a man laying in the road asleep (as indicated by those little z’s used in cartoons to depict a sleeping person) with a half empty botttle of booze at his side. As with most developing countries where the traditional lifestyle is evaporating and many men are unemployed, alcohol is a problem.
I can understand the alcoholism. It’s the falling asleep drunk in the middle of the road that confuses me. I can’t imagine being so drunk that I wouldn’t first move to the side of the road before laying down for my night’s sleep. But it’s true…
Driving at night, especially a weekend night, one must be on the lookout for people asleep in the road. One friend reported that on two occasions, as he turned from the main road onto his street he has had to stop and wake someone up. On a cloudy night a few weeks ago, while driving home on a rural road a different friend didn’t notice a sleeping drunk until it was too late.
If the story is true what happened afterward is even more amazing then a drunk guy lying down in the street. According to the driver, after running the man over, he stopp the car and knocked on a neighbor’s house. The neighbors were aware that the guy was asleep in the road but hadn’t bothered to move him. The police were summoned and my friend then had to convince them that they should take the run-over drunk to the hospital to be checked out. Fortunately, his injuries were not life threatening and the man survived.
If I were asked to design a unique roadside warning sign for Pohnpei, it would show a man laying in the road asleep (as indicated by those little z’s used in cartoons to depict a sleeping person) with a half empty botttle of booze at his side. As with most developing countries where the traditional lifestyle is evaporating and many men are unemployed, alcohol is a problem.
I can understand the alcoholism. It’s the falling asleep drunk in the middle of the road that confuses me. I can’t imagine being so drunk that I wouldn’t first move to the side of the road before laying down for my night’s sleep. But it’s true…
Driving at night, especially a weekend night, one must be on the lookout for people asleep in the road. One friend reported that on two occasions, as he turned from the main road onto his street he has had to stop and wake someone up. On a cloudy night a few weeks ago, while driving home on a rural road a different friend didn’t notice a sleeping drunk until it was too late.
If the story is true what happened afterward is even more amazing then a drunk guy lying down in the street. According to the driver, after running the man over, he stopp the car and knocked on a neighbor’s house. The neighbors were aware that the guy was asleep in the road but hadn’t bothered to move him. The police were summoned and my friend then had to convince them that they should take the run-over drunk to the hospital to be checked out. Fortunately, his injuries were not life threatening and the man survived.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Prom
We recently had the second annual menwei (ex-pat) prom.
To understand prom, one must first understand Super Savers. Super Savers is a second hand clothing store on the island. Due to its odd assortment of clothing, it is assumed it somehow buys full containers of clothes that haven’t been sorted for climate appropriateness. It is very handy for people traveling to cold weather climates, like Australia in July, because no other store sells fleece jackets, parkas, or anything else one would wear in the snow.
Perusing the inventory is like taking a walk down memory lane. The racks are filled with items representative of the last three decades. Last year one of the ex-pat teachers at the college noted that they had a wide variety of 1980s era gowns. Realizing it would be a waste to let those gowns and the bygone eras they represented sit on the shelf, prom was born. It was a small affair last year, attended by about 15 or so people, at a private residence.
Once started, the concept took hold. This year the theme, “Almost Paradise,” was selected and word spread. About 40 or so attended. The party was moved from a private residence to one of the island bars. Following in last year’s example, some looked for the most comical outfits they could find. Others chose to use the occasion to put on lipstick and nice clothes.
Since last year I was voted prom king for my (very creative if I say so myself) printer paper bow tie and cummerbund, this year I went sans costume and gave someone else a chance. Boris found a purple suit jacket and almost matching purple pants at Super Saver and was deservedly crowned king.
The prom was a fitting end to the school year as many of our ex-pat friends who teach at the community college or as part of the WorldTeach volunteer program will be, in a sense, graduating as they leave the island and go on to new adventures elsewhere.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Microneseans in the US Army
My friend Tony is a volunteer teacher with the organization WorldTeach. He wrote the following which appeared in the online edition of the Christian Science Monitor. The article provides some interesting insights into communicaiton and information sharing on the island. I was amazed by the comments of Pohnpein who volunteers to serve as a recruiter for the US Army.
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2010/0505/Uncle-Sam-wants-Micronesians-for-US-military
Christian Science Monitor
Uncle Sam wants Micronesians for US military
US military recruiting from the Federated States of Micronesia, per capita, leads all American states. Many see an economic path out of the isolated Pacific nation, but some don't know they might fight in Iraq or Afghanistan.
By Tony Azios, Correspondent / May 5, 2010
Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia
The portraits of stern-faced young men on armed forces recruiting posters, hanging from cafeteria walls, seem to gaze down at the mingling teenagers. Below, about 130 high school seniors have gathered to sit for a US military aptitude test required by the school's administration. Several dozen plan to enlist; many more are still on the fence.
The students are from the Western Pacific island of Pohnpei. And the scene is repeated nationwide several times each year – putting the four states that make up the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) ahead of every US state in Army recruits per capita in recent years.
Lloyd Daniel, a talkative senior with a taste for pizza and American slang, will ship out for Army training on June 29. He joined for the same reasons most kids here do: to see the world, get a steady paycheck, and pay for college. Also, Lloyd feels a sense of debt to America: "The US has been here helping out our island in many ways, so I feel that we, as Micronesians, must return the favor."
Liberated from Japanese occupation by US troops during World War II, the FSM were administered by the United States as part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands from 1947 until independence in 1986, when the two countries entered into a compact of free association. The independent nations of Palau and the Marshall Islands, which also were administered by the US following World War II, negotiated separate compacts and achieved independence at different times but are also visited by US military recruiters. The compact obligates the US to defend these sovereign countries from attack, and grants their citizens permission to live and work in the US without a visa and serve in its armed forces. Non US-citizens can serve but cannot become commissioned or warrant officers.
This has been a major boon to Micronesia, located 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii. Its lackluster economy averages $2,200 gross domestic product per capita. With a median age of 18.9, the FSM has one of the world's youngest populations; with a 22 percent unemployment rate, however, jobs are scarce. Remittances from enlisted citizens help many families stay afloat, and the promise of education benefits, signing bonuses, and a starting salary of just under $17,000 for a private first class all serve as effective lures.
Some critics, however, see military recruiters as preying upon an impoverished population. "Economically disadvantaged families are filling the ranks of the US armed forces," says John Haglelgam, former president of the FSM. Mr. Haglelgam, who has opposed Micronesians serving in the US military, says most Micronesians share his view, but see the military as their best hope for upward mobility.
An opportunity to advance
"It's very unfortunate that families here are pinning their economic dreams and hopes on the blood of their children," says Haglelgam. "The chance for [extra income] has emboldened families to not object."
It is thought that between 1,000 and 1,500 of the FSM's approximately 107,000 citizens are currently enlisted, with many more veterans now in the US or on one of the nation's 607 widely scattered islands.
But while some Micronesians see the US military as their ticket out, many here are poorly informed of the risks. The FSM has suffered more casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan per capita than any US state, and has lost soldiers at a rate five times the US average. Some recruits sign on unaware the US is fighting two wars.
Hideaki Charley, a high school senior planning to ship out for Army training this summer, lives in an outer municipality where newspapers and Internet access are hard to come by. He only found out that America was at war in one country, not to mention two, about a year ago – weeks after he had enlisted.
'They didn't tell me about the wars'
"The recruiters didn't tell me about the wars," says Hideaki. "They told me about the good things" such as enlistment bonuses and the chance to travel. "But I didn't ask [about war]," he adds.
US forces may also find the remote islands such fertile ground for recruitment because residents have been largely spared from the deluge of media coverage of the years-old wars. A recent study by the Heritage Foundation of US enlistment rates cites "Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander" as the most overrepresented group as of 2005, with a ratio of 7.49, or an overrepresentation of 649 percent.
With three tours of duty in Vietnam and a career with Special Forces, 1st Sgt. Frank Semens (ret.) is one Pohnpeian who does know the risks. Still, in his role as US Army recruiter here, Semens would rather not discuss with potential recruits the dangers they may face.
"I've never tried to explain the risks to [potential recruits] because I don't want to scare them," says Semens. "I tell them about the opportunities."
Semens says that most Pohnpeian parents assume their child will automatically become a sohnpei, or warrior. "Not so," he tells them. Semens stresses to recruits and their families that there are many noncombat positions available that provide training in applicable skills and trades. It's these opportunities, as well as a long military tradition that keeps Micronesians enlisting at such high rates, says Peter Prahar, US ambassador to the FSM. "If we didn't give a [recruitment] test, there would be an uproar," says Ambassador Prahar. "People want to take this test."
Haglelgam also recognizes the popularity of service. "This is a volunteer military, and people should have the right to make that choice," he says. "My hope is that they will have all the information in front of them when they make their decision."
Even when they know the risks, many still choose to serve. "I would still join. It doesn't matter," says Hideaki. For now, what he most wants to discuss is his first trip off-island this summer to Guam, for a medical checkup with the Army.
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2010/0505/Uncle-Sam-wants-Micronesians-for-US-military
Christian Science Monitor
Uncle Sam wants Micronesians for US military
US military recruiting from the Federated States of Micronesia, per capita, leads all American states. Many see an economic path out of the isolated Pacific nation, but some don't know they might fight in Iraq or Afghanistan.
By Tony Azios, Correspondent / May 5, 2010
Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia
The portraits of stern-faced young men on armed forces recruiting posters, hanging from cafeteria walls, seem to gaze down at the mingling teenagers. Below, about 130 high school seniors have gathered to sit for a US military aptitude test required by the school's administration. Several dozen plan to enlist; many more are still on the fence.
The students are from the Western Pacific island of Pohnpei. And the scene is repeated nationwide several times each year – putting the four states that make up the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) ahead of every US state in Army recruits per capita in recent years.
Lloyd Daniel, a talkative senior with a taste for pizza and American slang, will ship out for Army training on June 29. He joined for the same reasons most kids here do: to see the world, get a steady paycheck, and pay for college. Also, Lloyd feels a sense of debt to America: "The US has been here helping out our island in many ways, so I feel that we, as Micronesians, must return the favor."
Liberated from Japanese occupation by US troops during World War II, the FSM were administered by the United States as part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands from 1947 until independence in 1986, when the two countries entered into a compact of free association. The independent nations of Palau and the Marshall Islands, which also were administered by the US following World War II, negotiated separate compacts and achieved independence at different times but are also visited by US military recruiters. The compact obligates the US to defend these sovereign countries from attack, and grants their citizens permission to live and work in the US without a visa and serve in its armed forces. Non US-citizens can serve but cannot become commissioned or warrant officers.
This has been a major boon to Micronesia, located 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii. Its lackluster economy averages $2,200 gross domestic product per capita. With a median age of 18.9, the FSM has one of the world's youngest populations; with a 22 percent unemployment rate, however, jobs are scarce. Remittances from enlisted citizens help many families stay afloat, and the promise of education benefits, signing bonuses, and a starting salary of just under $17,000 for a private first class all serve as effective lures.
Some critics, however, see military recruiters as preying upon an impoverished population. "Economically disadvantaged families are filling the ranks of the US armed forces," says John Haglelgam, former president of the FSM. Mr. Haglelgam, who has opposed Micronesians serving in the US military, says most Micronesians share his view, but see the military as their best hope for upward mobility.
An opportunity to advance
"It's very unfortunate that families here are pinning their economic dreams and hopes on the blood of their children," says Haglelgam. "The chance for [extra income] has emboldened families to not object."
It is thought that between 1,000 and 1,500 of the FSM's approximately 107,000 citizens are currently enlisted, with many more veterans now in the US or on one of the nation's 607 widely scattered islands.
But while some Micronesians see the US military as their ticket out, many here are poorly informed of the risks. The FSM has suffered more casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan per capita than any US state, and has lost soldiers at a rate five times the US average. Some recruits sign on unaware the US is fighting two wars.
Hideaki Charley, a high school senior planning to ship out for Army training this summer, lives in an outer municipality where newspapers and Internet access are hard to come by. He only found out that America was at war in one country, not to mention two, about a year ago – weeks after he had enlisted.
'They didn't tell me about the wars'
"The recruiters didn't tell me about the wars," says Hideaki. "They told me about the good things" such as enlistment bonuses and the chance to travel. "But I didn't ask [about war]," he adds.
US forces may also find the remote islands such fertile ground for recruitment because residents have been largely spared from the deluge of media coverage of the years-old wars. A recent study by the Heritage Foundation of US enlistment rates cites "Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander" as the most overrepresented group as of 2005, with a ratio of 7.49, or an overrepresentation of 649 percent.
With three tours of duty in Vietnam and a career with Special Forces, 1st Sgt. Frank Semens (ret.) is one Pohnpeian who does know the risks. Still, in his role as US Army recruiter here, Semens would rather not discuss with potential recruits the dangers they may face.
"I've never tried to explain the risks to [potential recruits] because I don't want to scare them," says Semens. "I tell them about the opportunities."
Semens says that most Pohnpeian parents assume their child will automatically become a sohnpei, or warrior. "Not so," he tells them. Semens stresses to recruits and their families that there are many noncombat positions available that provide training in applicable skills and trades. It's these opportunities, as well as a long military tradition that keeps Micronesians enlisting at such high rates, says Peter Prahar, US ambassador to the FSM. "If we didn't give a [recruitment] test, there would be an uproar," says Ambassador Prahar. "People want to take this test."
Haglelgam also recognizes the popularity of service. "This is a volunteer military, and people should have the right to make that choice," he says. "My hope is that they will have all the information in front of them when they make their decision."
Even when they know the risks, many still choose to serve. "I would still join. It doesn't matter," says Hideaki. For now, what he most wants to discuss is his first trip off-island this summer to Guam, for a medical checkup with the Army.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Diving Truk Lagoon
On my most recent trip to Chuuk I was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to do some diving in the lagoon. During WW II the Chuuk Lagoon (known then as the Truk Lagoon) served as the “forward anchorage” for the Imperial Japanese Navy. After capturing the Marshall Islands, the American forces launched Operation Hailstone on Feb 17, 1944. Over a three day period over 60 Japanese ships, including aircraft carriers and destroyers, were sunk.
Over the course of a weekend, I did four dives exploring wrecks that were in the shallower (less than 110 ft) water. On Saturday we entered a torpedo hole to explore the inside of one destroyed destroyer and in another ship we saw the remains of a truck chassis, glass jars, bullets, and a machine gun. In a freighter we explored on Sunday, the cargo hold was still filled with torpedoes and warheads.
The lagoon is a one-of-a-kind diving destination and there is a constant trickle of wreck dive enthusiasts and WWII history buffs who make their way there to dive. Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on your viewpoint, Chuuk has not managed to develop itself as a major dive vacation destination. The lack of other divers makes for a pleasant experience. On each dive we had the ship to ourselves and enjoyed that wonderful sense of isolation. On the other hand, the lagoon could easily serve as the anchor for a tourism industry and provide the jobs and economic independence that the island needs.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
On language and Culture
While reading a book about language last night, I recalled learning in a sociology class that Eskimoes had several different words for snow - each describing a specific condition. This fact was told to us to introduce the concept of linguistic relativism. This lead me to then wonder how many synonyms Micronesians have for the word quickly.
Micronesians are not known for their sense of urgency. “Island time” is the common term used. It is a frustration shared by many ex-pats tasked with the challenge of professionalizing the workforce and aiding in the country’s development.
In English I might use the words speedily, hurriedly, quickly, urgently, rapidly, swiftly, or hastily. I might even borrow foreign words and phrases that have become part of our language such as pronto or post haste. I might even use the acronym ASAP.
I asked a Pohnpein how many words they have for 'quickly'. She could only think of one but she did add that their language structure allows for descriptive to be added to the beginning or ending of a word but I’m not sure if she just meant that they could say quick, quicker, and quickest.
Kosrae is another island/language in the FSM. It is smaller than Pohnpei and has a longer history of interaction with traders and missionaries. A Kosraen I asked knew of three words for quickly in her language.
Micronesians are not known for their sense of urgency. “Island time” is the common term used. It is a frustration shared by many ex-pats tasked with the challenge of professionalizing the workforce and aiding in the country’s development.
In English I might use the words speedily, hurriedly, quickly, urgently, rapidly, swiftly, or hastily. I might even borrow foreign words and phrases that have become part of our language such as pronto or post haste. I might even use the acronym ASAP.
I asked a Pohnpein how many words they have for 'quickly'. She could only think of one but she did add that their language structure allows for descriptive to be added to the beginning or ending of a word but I’m not sure if she just meant that they could say quick, quicker, and quickest.
Kosrae is another island/language in the FSM. It is smaller than Pohnpei and has a longer history of interaction with traders and missionaries. A Kosraen I asked knew of three words for quickly in her language.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
The things you can learn about a job applicant
While the Micronesian government workplace is modeled after the U.S., there are certain differences. For instance, our office is in the process of filling an open position and it is interesting what I can learn about applicants from their completed job applications.
Boxes 10 - 16 on the official FSM government application are for the following pieces of information: age, birthdate, birthplace, height, weight, sex, and marital status. Further along the application, the applicant is asked to check yes or no to the following questions: Have you any physical handicap, chronic disease, or other disability?; Have you ever had a nervous breakdown?; and Have you ever had tuberculosis?
The application does not ask the applicant to state his/her religion but one applicant chose to include it on her resume, along with her address and phone number. Though religion isn't included on the application, church and state are not as separated as they are in the U.S. On the official memo regarding Christmas office closures, the President informing the government employees "... the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ..."
Boxes 10 - 16 on the official FSM government application are for the following pieces of information: age, birthdate, birthplace, height, weight, sex, and marital status. Further along the application, the applicant is asked to check yes or no to the following questions: Have you any physical handicap, chronic disease, or other disability?; Have you ever had a nervous breakdown?; and Have you ever had tuberculosis?
The application does not ask the applicant to state his/her religion but one applicant chose to include it on her resume, along with her address and phone number. Though religion isn't included on the application, church and state are not as separated as they are in the U.S. On the official memo regarding Christmas office closures, the President informing the government employees "... the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ..."
Monday, March 15, 2010
Double Parked
Friday March 5
Yesterday I had a new first. I asked a president - of a country - to move his car.
Attempting to leave my hotel (I’m in Chuuk this week), I walked out to the small crowded parking lot and behind my dusty little rental car, a bigger dustier car had parked. Looking at the back of the car, I saw that it had government plates. Recalling that as I had walked across the hotel’s back patio, the President and three associates had been drinking coffee. The mystery was solved. I approached the table, waited to be noticed, and then stated. “Excuse me, but I think one of you gentlemen is parked behind my car.”
“That might be mine,” the President replied. I had assumed (and hoped) it was one of his companions.
“It’s a black car with government plates parked on the end.”
“That’s mine,” the President confessed and then explained to me that double parking is allowed at the hotel. I was surprised that he felt the need to explain that he wasn’t violating any accepted practices and more surprised when he continued, “do you want me to move it.”
Culturally, I think the appropriate response would have been to tell him no, it was ok, and that I could wait. However, it was one of those unexpected quick moments where one doesn’t have the time to stop and think of the appropriate response. Being prone to honesty and logic and – let’s face it why would I have gone over to their table if I didn’t want the car moved? - I responded, “yes, if you don’t mind, I’d appreciate it.”
I beat a hasty retreat wondering if I committed a horrible faux paus. I expected that someone would be sent to move the car but a couple of minutes later the President strode up, got into his car, and drove away.
Yesterday I had a new first. I asked a president - of a country - to move his car.
Attempting to leave my hotel (I’m in Chuuk this week), I walked out to the small crowded parking lot and behind my dusty little rental car, a bigger dustier car had parked. Looking at the back of the car, I saw that it had government plates. Recalling that as I had walked across the hotel’s back patio, the President and three associates had been drinking coffee. The mystery was solved. I approached the table, waited to be noticed, and then stated. “Excuse me, but I think one of you gentlemen is parked behind my car.”
“That might be mine,” the President replied. I had assumed (and hoped) it was one of his companions.
“It’s a black car with government plates parked on the end.”
“That’s mine,” the President confessed and then explained to me that double parking is allowed at the hotel. I was surprised that he felt the need to explain that he wasn’t violating any accepted practices and more surprised when he continued, “do you want me to move it.”
Culturally, I think the appropriate response would have been to tell him no, it was ok, and that I could wait. However, it was one of those unexpected quick moments where one doesn’t have the time to stop and think of the appropriate response. Being prone to honesty and logic and – let’s face it why would I have gone over to their table if I didn’t want the car moved? - I responded, “yes, if you don’t mind, I’d appreciate it.”
I beat a hasty retreat wondering if I committed a horrible faux paus. I expected that someone would be sent to move the car but a couple of minutes later the President strode up, got into his car, and drove away.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Another Year Has Come and Gone
Another year has come and gone in this blogger's life. To celebrate, our bridge club had a potluck dinner in addition to the bridge game. I don't feel much older. I'm in as good as (if not better) shape than I was last year which always help. The only thing that really makes me feel older is the fact that I belong to a bridge club. It just sounds so old!
Most people have heard of th game but many don't know how to play. For those midwesterners familiar with Euker, the simplest explanation is that Eukra is bridge's poor country cousin. In bridge all 52 cards are played and points are accumulated over a number of games using a complex system.
Mary, who has come and gone, taught it to us. Things evolved from a random one night event to an scheduled game that occurs two Saturday nights a month. Thank you Mary. You may be gone but not forgotten.
Interest in the game has expanded. The name I gave our group - The Dirty Dozen Bridge Club - is now outdated as there are 14 names on the e-mail distribution list.
Last Saturday was also a 5K race and we ran into several friends that morning. Invitations to the potluck were extended and it turned out to be a very social night. Little bridge was played and at someone's suggestion a post-midnight outing to Club Kantaro occurred (see posting "An odd day..."
Odd days and Odder nights
From last weekend –
Twenty hours ago the sound of a beeping alarm clock pierced my consciousness and I awoke in the pre-dawn morning to a room still dark. A half hour later as the sky began to lighten, Wenonoa and I headed downtown dressed in our running apparel for the first 10K race of the season.
It’s about a mile and a half drive to the grocery store that serves as the starting point. We rounded a bend in the road and saw a group of four adolescent Pohnpeian males ambling down the street and taking swigs from a plastic vodka bottle that I assume was opened the night before. It was the kind of vodka that can easily be confused with rubbing alcohol, the type of booze that can only be drank by people still capable of drinking at that hour. I had heard that this site was not uncommon on Pohnpei but I’m not typically up and out of the house that early on a weekend to see it.
Farther along the way we came across a friend out for an early morning stroll in trousers and a polo shirt. Still further, we crossed paths with Don, an icon on the island. He is an ex-pat biology teacher at the college who has been here for several years.
Don enjoys the research opportunities available in such a unique island location and it is said that he has discovered more than one species. He accepts that the island has slow internet access which is made slower by other users with whom the bandwidth must be shared. Rather than complain, Don, who by choice does not own a vehicle, cheerfully gets up at what most of us consider odd hours and walks the 5 miles to the college to do his internet research.
This Saturday morning at 6:30 AM Don was walking up main street, the white pillow case that serves as his book bag slung over his shoulder, on his way to the school. From what I’m told, Don was off to a late start. It’s said that he sometimes leaves his apartment at 2 or 3 in the morning.
It may have been typical Saturday morning in Pohnpei but it was an odd start to the day for me. My day ended just as oddly as it had begun. Twenty hours after my alarm clocked beeped, a group of us ex-pats clapped and chanted “Mommasan, mommasan, mommasan” in an attempt to persuade the proprietor of a karaoke bar/brothel to sing the final song of the night.
Mommason didn’t sing herself, but she loves to hear Mike belt out songs in his deep baritone voice. Even though all of us had quit ordering drinks and the police had come and gone, reminding her of closing time, mommason had kept pushing the mike towards Mike to do an encore performance of Kenny Roger’s The Gambler, John Denver's Country Roads, and Journey’s Small Town Girl.. If the market for lawyers dealing with economic and tax issues should dry up, Mike should be able to eek out a living as a lounge singer.
I should explain that by most accounts Club Kantaro is not really a brothel. Rather, it appears that it is just a meeting place for young ladies (of the night) to meet potential suitors fresh off the Asian fishing boats - a spot for true romantics. There are a few private rooms but it did seem that they were just for private group karaoke sessions.
Twenty hours ago the sound of a beeping alarm clock pierced my consciousness and I awoke in the pre-dawn morning to a room still dark. A half hour later as the sky began to lighten, Wenonoa and I headed downtown dressed in our running apparel for the first 10K race of the season.
It’s about a mile and a half drive to the grocery store that serves as the starting point. We rounded a bend in the road and saw a group of four adolescent Pohnpeian males ambling down the street and taking swigs from a plastic vodka bottle that I assume was opened the night before. It was the kind of vodka that can easily be confused with rubbing alcohol, the type of booze that can only be drank by people still capable of drinking at that hour. I had heard that this site was not uncommon on Pohnpei but I’m not typically up and out of the house that early on a weekend to see it.
Farther along the way we came across a friend out for an early morning stroll in trousers and a polo shirt. Still further, we crossed paths with Don, an icon on the island. He is an ex-pat biology teacher at the college who has been here for several years.
Don enjoys the research opportunities available in such a unique island location and it is said that he has discovered more than one species. He accepts that the island has slow internet access which is made slower by other users with whom the bandwidth must be shared. Rather than complain, Don, who by choice does not own a vehicle, cheerfully gets up at what most of us consider odd hours and walks the 5 miles to the college to do his internet research.
This Saturday morning at 6:30 AM Don was walking up main street, the white pillow case that serves as his book bag slung over his shoulder, on his way to the school. From what I’m told, Don was off to a late start. It’s said that he sometimes leaves his apartment at 2 or 3 in the morning.
It may have been typical Saturday morning in Pohnpei but it was an odd start to the day for me. My day ended just as oddly as it had begun. Twenty hours after my alarm clocked beeped, a group of us ex-pats clapped and chanted “Mommasan, mommasan, mommasan” in an attempt to persuade the proprietor of a karaoke bar/brothel to sing the final song of the night.
Mommason didn’t sing herself, but she loves to hear Mike belt out songs in his deep baritone voice. Even though all of us had quit ordering drinks and the police had come and gone, reminding her of closing time, mommason had kept pushing the mike towards Mike to do an encore performance of Kenny Roger’s The Gambler, John Denver's Country Roads, and Journey’s Small Town Girl.. If the market for lawyers dealing with economic and tax issues should dry up, Mike should be able to eek out a living as a lounge singer.
I should explain that by most accounts Club Kantaro is not really a brothel. Rather, it appears that it is just a meeting place for young ladies (of the night) to meet potential suitors fresh off the Asian fishing boats - a spot for true romantics. There are a few private rooms but it did seem that they were just for private group karaoke sessions.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
A view from the plane
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Scuba Photos
In November I finally finished my scuba certification class. Soon after, a few of us set up a scuba club and we've been diving most Saturday's ever since. The attached pictures are some that Karien and Boris took. I have pleny of others but because we still don't have high speed internet, it takes a long time to upload pictures. I'll try and add some more later.
The diving has been wonderful. I don't know if its the serenity and quiet one experiences 60 feet below the surface or if its just the nitrogen, but I always return relaxed and at peace.
Monday, January 18, 2010
The softer side of Micronesia
My blog entries often have a critical edge to them. Micronesia has its share of fraud, waste, and abuse in the government and my workdays are spent in that arena. There is a lot of mistrust between the state governments and the national government. On the individual level, people are mostly apathetic and accepting of the government’s shortfalls.
It’s hard not to be jaded. However, there is a softer side to Micronesia. On the individual level, Micronesians are generally kind and considerate to us ex-pats. There aren’t too many places left in the world where someone would put his 6-year old daughter in a stranger’s car just to help out the stranger.
Last week Boris was trying to find the house of Ancher, a local guy we hire to take us diving on the weekends. After driving to where he thought the boatsman lived, a local resident informed Boris that Ancher lived in another part of town. Wanting to make sure Boris would eventually find Ancher, the gentlemen sent his 6-year old daughter with Boris to show him Ancher’s house.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
New Years
For New Years we left the hustle and bustle of Pohnpei and went to Black Corral Atoll. A ten minute boat ride away, Black Corral is small. If you put a football field on Black Corral, there would be no room left for the bleachers and to be honest I’m not even sure you could fit a football field on Black Corral. It is owned by one of the old families on the island and they rent it out for day and overnight use.
A group of 20 of us rented it out and enjoyed a potluck dinner and campout under a very full moon. New Year’s Day we were treated to a pleasant and delicious surprise lunch. Conrad, out fishing, passed by the atoll and offered us a freshly caught wahoo. Paul swam out to the boat and returned with lunch. He cleaned it and cooked it over the hot coals of a fire. The peanut butter sandwiches stayed in the cooler.
Back on Pohnpei, New Years is an excuse to let out a little exuberance. The local tradition is to pile onto a back of a flatbed truck on New Year’s Day and drive around yelling new years greetings, throwing candy to kids, and banging on various metal objects. We returned mid-afternoon New Year’s Day and saw a little of the festivity and heard even more. Using old oil drums and who knows what else, the banging was actually pretty musical. Floating up the mountainside, it sounded more like steel drum music then I expected and was surprisingly enjoyable to listen to.
Friday, January 8, 2010
Newbies
Newbies on the island are a source of amusement for us seasoned ex-pats. Confused, they begin many conversations with “I don’t understand why...” or “How come they don’t just…“ Confusion turns to bewilderment and sentences begin with “Don’t they realize how simple it would be to….,” or “but it would make so more sense for them….” Sometimes the rest of us will break out in laughter when a newbie just starts a sentence with the word why.
Sam is a newbie on the island. He arrived fresh faced and full of academic book learning in the areas of economics and political science. I chuckle at just the thought of Sam trying to apply his education here. Sam is joining his wife who has been here for a two full months. He has a lot to learn. Driving to one of the two restaurants on the island with pizza on the menu, Sam’s wife, who had noticed earlier that the supermarket shelves had been restocked but the refrigeration case was pretty empty, remarked that she hoped the restaurant had cheese. Sam’s response was “why wouldn’t they have cheese?”
One does not assume here that a restaurant will be serving all the items on a menu. I look forward to being amused by Sam for the next month or so. For those of you who are curious –Fifteen minutes after placing their pizza order, the couple learned that his wife was in fact correct and the restaurant did not have cheese. They did not have pizza that night.
Sam is a newbie on the island. He arrived fresh faced and full of academic book learning in the areas of economics and political science. I chuckle at just the thought of Sam trying to apply his education here. Sam is joining his wife who has been here for a two full months. He has a lot to learn. Driving to one of the two restaurants on the island with pizza on the menu, Sam’s wife, who had noticed earlier that the supermarket shelves had been restocked but the refrigeration case was pretty empty, remarked that she hoped the restaurant had cheese. Sam’s response was “why wouldn’t they have cheese?”
One does not assume here that a restaurant will be serving all the items on a menu. I look forward to being amused by Sam for the next month or so. For those of you who are curious –Fifteen minutes after placing their pizza order, the couple learned that his wife was in fact correct and the restaurant did not have cheese. They did not have pizza that night.
Monday, January 4, 2010
A tale of two islands
At the end of World War II the USA was in control over several islands in Micronesia including Pohnpei, Chuuk, Kosrae, Yap, as well as Saipan, Palau, and the Marshal Islands (Majuroa, Kwajelan, etc). In the post war years the US Navy administered the region which was known as the Trust Territory. Eventually, the islands were given the opportunity to choose a direction for their future. The choices included becoming a permanent US territory, operating under a compact of free association, or complete independence.
Opinions differed among the islands as to what route to take and unity disintegrated. Pohnpei, Chuuk, Kosrae, and Yap, though each culturally and linguistically unique and separated by hundreds of miles of ocean from each other, together formed the Federated States of Micronesia and entered into a compact of free association with the US. Palau and the Marshal Islands each separately entered into compact agreements with the US. Saipan, along with two nearby smaller islands, formed the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands (CNMI) and became a U.S territory.
Wenonoa and I just came back from a 4 night stay in Saipan. What a difference from Pohnpei! Saipan is a true island paradise vacation spot. In fairness to Pohnpei, I must acknowledge that Saipan has certain geological and geographic benefits. Rather than the mangrove swamps that form the perimeter of Pohnpei, Saipan is ringed by beautiful (and public) sand beaches that lead into turquoise water. A walking/running/biking trail parallels the mostly flat beachfront road.
Saipan is also much drier. Pohnpei’s mountain peaks collect clouds and ensure an almost constant flow of rain (the interior of Pohnpei is said to average around 400 inches of rain a year). The humidity on Pohnpei can be stifling. Mold is an enemy that just won’t quit and the almost daily downpours beat up the roads of Pohnpei pretty badly.
Saipan is also closer to Asia. I’m told that it only takes 3 to 4 hours to fly from Japan to Saipan. This last point is important. Saipan has welcomed the tourism industry. Several large resorts are located near the coastline and recreational opportunities abound. Tourists can jet ski, parasail, be taken snorkeling and diving, and even enjoy spa treatments. Pohnpei lacks all of that.
Saipan does have it dark side. Since Saipan is technically part of the U.S., clothing manufacturers were able to set up garment factories, import workers from Asia, and put the ‘made in the USA label’ on the finished product without having to pay US federal minimum wages or be subject to OSHA regulations. The sweatshops have now all been closed down.
Other noticeable differences between the two islands included the general cleanliness of Saipan as compared to Pohnpei, the minimal number of dogs wandering the streets of Saipan, and the presence of a daily newspaper on Saipan.
I left Saipan wondering what Pohnpei would be like if it had become a territory instead of going the compact route. Would a different political structure have influenced the economic direction and outcomes (or lack thereof) that the island has taken? Would the people be better of or worse off?
Opinions differed among the islands as to what route to take and unity disintegrated. Pohnpei, Chuuk, Kosrae, and Yap, though each culturally and linguistically unique and separated by hundreds of miles of ocean from each other, together formed the Federated States of Micronesia and entered into a compact of free association with the US. Palau and the Marshal Islands each separately entered into compact agreements with the US. Saipan, along with two nearby smaller islands, formed the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands (CNMI) and became a U.S territory.
Wenonoa and I just came back from a 4 night stay in Saipan. What a difference from Pohnpei! Saipan is a true island paradise vacation spot. In fairness to Pohnpei, I must acknowledge that Saipan has certain geological and geographic benefits. Rather than the mangrove swamps that form the perimeter of Pohnpei, Saipan is ringed by beautiful (and public) sand beaches that lead into turquoise water. A walking/running/biking trail parallels the mostly flat beachfront road.
Saipan is also much drier. Pohnpei’s mountain peaks collect clouds and ensure an almost constant flow of rain (the interior of Pohnpei is said to average around 400 inches of rain a year). The humidity on Pohnpei can be stifling. Mold is an enemy that just won’t quit and the almost daily downpours beat up the roads of Pohnpei pretty badly.
Saipan is also closer to Asia. I’m told that it only takes 3 to 4 hours to fly from Japan to Saipan. This last point is important. Saipan has welcomed the tourism industry. Several large resorts are located near the coastline and recreational opportunities abound. Tourists can jet ski, parasail, be taken snorkeling and diving, and even enjoy spa treatments. Pohnpei lacks all of that.
Saipan does have it dark side. Since Saipan is technically part of the U.S., clothing manufacturers were able to set up garment factories, import workers from Asia, and put the ‘made in the USA label’ on the finished product without having to pay US federal minimum wages or be subject to OSHA regulations. The sweatshops have now all been closed down.
Other noticeable differences between the two islands included the general cleanliness of Saipan as compared to Pohnpei, the minimal number of dogs wandering the streets of Saipan, and the presence of a daily newspaper on Saipan.
I left Saipan wondering what Pohnpei would be like if it had become a territory instead of going the compact route. Would a different political structure have influenced the economic direction and outcomes (or lack thereof) that the island has taken? Would the people be better of or worse off?
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