Friday, February 8, 2013

Some perspective would help...


           I work really hard on a daily basis to find positives in everything.  Some days and with some people this can be a difficult task, but a worthwhile one.  People who are continually negative and have a pessimistic view on seemingly everything perplex me.  I often remember the film “American Beauty” and recall how the main character can find beauty even in an old plastic bag being blown by the wind.  It may seem silly, but I don’t know how you could get through life sanely without making extra effort to have a positive outlook. 

For some people this can be quite easy.  I’m sure we all know those who are always kind, happy and positive; however, I’m just as sure that we all know those people who are rude, downers and negative about everything.  The world is full of so much negativity; civil war in Syria, 2 disastrous wars fought by America, rape in India, terrorists gaining ground in Mali, bombings in Turkey and on and on and on.  However, the little things in life are often overlooked.  The smile between two strangers, the warm embrace between a father and his daughter at the airport or the person that takes time from his day to feed and listen to a homeless person. 

All too often our collective attention via the mass media is drawn to the negative, but rarely are the small positives that occur every minute, every hour and every day are brought to our attention.  This wave of negativity is not just seen through the mainstream media, but also in social media.  The negativity of political posts and discussions has hit a chronic level.  I am willing, if not eager, to discuss and debate via Facebook, but the rude and overtly negative posts unwilling for intellectual discussion have gotten all too common.  The few, but refreshing, posts with uplifting quotes or images can be inspiring, but are way too frequent to the hatred and disrespect afforded to our elected officials.  My hope is that our modern society could take stock a bit more of just how fortunate we are and how beautiful the world can be and not disregard the negative in the world, but measure it against the positive that is not seen in the small moments of the day.  

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Not a Paradise for all...


           As you may have read in my previous blog Janae, Neyla and I have found a little paradise for us.  I love my teaching job.  Janae and Neyla love spending so much time with each other.  We love the simpler, slower way of life here, but Majuro and the Marshall Islands are not a paradise for all who live here.  The average per capita income here is less than $2000 per year and the country is so far away from everything that simple imported food costs as much and usually more than it does in the United States where the average income is 20 times higher.  The history of the Marshall Islands is an interesting one and like any other country, they have a hard time stepping out from the shadow of their history, even when they try. 
            The first people came here approximately 2000 years ago.  Not much other than Island legends are for sure known of early Marshallese life other than they were great fisherman, sailors in their amazing outriggers and used innovative “stick charts” that were used for navigating the Pacific.  In the early 1500’s Spanish explorers ran into the series of Atolls and brought Christianity to the Marshallese.  Even to this day Christianity is a very dear to most of the Marshallese people.  Somewhere along the way English explorer John Marshall also ran into the islands though never set foot on them and yet somehow his name was used to describe these islands.  It is quite strange to me that they never officially changed the name of the country to something more for the people and not named after an English guy who never really came here.
The Spanish claimed the islands, but had very little to do with anything here until they sold the islands to the Germans in the mid 19th Century.  I find it similarly strange that the Spanish could sell a bunch of islands to another country that they just happen to stumble upon 3 centuries ago.  The Germans didn’t seem too interested in these islands as several of the Germans who came here famously declared that these coral Atolls had no real value and would never be a productive branch of the Empire.  Therefore, aside from a few Germans coming here and mixing into Marshallese culture and bringing some of western culture with them, the Germans didn’t have a major impact here.  After WW1, the Japanese moved in and took over and quickly moved many men to the Island in an attempt to modernize these “backwards” people.  The Japanese brought schools, roads and even new modern inventions, as they were a newly industrialized nation.  The Japanese, like many other colonial nations, always saw themselves as superior to those they were ruling and believed Marshallese culture primitive and quite silly. 
Let’s skip forward to after WW2.  The United States beat the Japanese in the Pacific and now were left with a bunch of islands to dole out essentially as they see fit.  The Marshalls were taken in by the United States as a protectorate, but not out of benevolence, the USA wanted something.  As one of the two dominant superpowers in the post-war world, the United States wanted something from everyone.  They had used Nuclear weapons against Japan, but little was still really known about this new weapon or just how powerful or potent it could be.  The military wanted to know more about effects and potential ways to utilize the newly found power of the atom. 
Leaders from the United States Navy went to a small Atoll in the northern part of the Marshalls, called Bikini.  There were just a few hundred people living on this Atoll and the USA wanted them to leave.  The military thought this would be the perfect place to test Nuclear weapons.  Why you may ask would they “need” an inhabited atoll when there were uninhabited atolls and islands that could be use?  Great question, and through much research I’ve yet to find an answer.  Apparently, to some US officials this was a perfect location and type of Atoll to nuke and destroy.  The officials used references to Christianity to the primitive leaders of the Bikini people and tried to convince them to leave for the “good of mankind.”  They did and now it is poisoned forever and the Bikini people are spread throughout the world in a sort of Diaspora.  That’s the short story, if you want to read the long one, check out a great book by Jack Niedenthal called, For the Good of Mankind. 
The largest bomb in human history ever exploded happened in 1954 in the Bikini Atoll, it was so large that it completely incinerated one of the islands in the Atoll and the nuclear dust and waste poisoned another near Atoll called Rongerik.  To the people living on Rongerik, this is known as the day of two suns.  As the Sun was rising in the East the Nuclear explosion went off in the west and looked as if another sun was rising.  The military knew the wind forecast for the day and that Rongerik would likely be poisoned, but they exploded the bomb anyway exposing the children of that atoll to burns and cancer, which obviously followed. 
This use of Marshallese land for over 50 nuclear explosions has linked the USA to the Marshall Islands forever.  In no way can the United States ever make up for destroying Bikini Atoll and incinerating 3 of its islands.  In no way can the United States make up for the cancer and fallout sickness.  But it is the duty of the United States to try to make up for this shame.  They supply much of the money for the Marshallese medical and postal system and many grants to the schools and public works.  Modern life was brought to an island ill equipped for modern life by the Japanese and Americans and now modern life here is dependent upon those two countries aid. 

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Fast-forward to 2013 and the Marshall Islands is a beautiful place with a proud but impoverished population.  The problematic issues here include, but are not limited to, street children with seemingly no parents and no school to attend, a quasi-feudal oligarchy that really rules the country, a climate that does not mix with modern life, an economy dependant upon foreign aid (it doesn’t have to be this way), and the most critical problem of all, global warming.  Scientists forecast that these coral Atolls have less than 50 years left if the warming trends continue at their current rates.  What happens to these people then when their country is submerged under the vast Pacific?  That remains to be seen, but in the present there are many folks here not living in the paradise that this country could be. 
The United Nations ranks every country in every region of the world for education based on how well their students perform on certain assessments.  The Marshall Islands has consistently ranked dead last in the Oceania region each and every year.  Part of the major problem is that the people who live on the “outer islands” have very little practical purpose for an education.  Most of them live a self-sustaining life with little or no knowledge of the modern world and to learn English and other core classes seems a bit silly.  Add to this that the government has mandated that all education be in English to a group of kids whom most rarely if ever speak English at home.  Then, if and only if, students pass an entrance exam in 8th grade are they allowed to attend of the few high schools in larger islands.  They then are forced to leave everything they’ve ever known behind and go to a more urban island to get a high school degree that again, serves little practical purpose for them.  It is difficult to assert the values of a modern western democracy into people who live on a self-sustaining tiny island disconnected from the modern world.  I wonder if education couldn’t be more practical here and a little less idealistic, as clearly the rankings show there are no results behind this attempt at a modern education system. 
The bigger problem stemming from this education system or lack thereof, is that unlike the United States, not all kids are mandated to go to school and if they were, there would be no way to afford it.  The tragic result is an over abundance of street children that really do nothing during the day.  They have no place in the community and grow up to continue to have no sense of belonging and purpose.  Crime is not very prevalent here in the Marshalls, but one can only wonder what will become of these street children as they grow up.  The birth rate here is one of the highest in the world at just over 7 and as population continues to rise and the government and economy are still unable to meet the needs of all of these children, hope starts to wane.  Something must be done about these children.  Some programs must be started, but as far as I can tell, little care is afforded to these poor souls.

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For Janae and I the climate here is beautiful.  At night it is in the low 70’s with a lovely wind off of the ocean and during the day even when it is sunny and mid to high 80’s the air conditioning is not needed as the same wind off the ocean is a welcome natural cooling device.  However, given these splendid positives of the climate, the over-whelming negative is the difficulty to keep anything clean and new.  The humid and salty air erodes all modern goods.  The life of electronics and metals are extremely low here and add to that the increased price since shipping here can be so challenging.  While a TV or computers are slightly more expensive here, their lifespan here is a quarter of what it’d be in Chicago or Colorado.  The “sweat” of humidity and salt collect everywhere and erode.  Cars are in horrible shape in just a year or two.  Buildings that look a half a century old are maybe a decade.  Freshly painted wood peels and looks as if it’d never been painted at all let alone just a few short weeks ago.  Add to this the fact that modern culture is extremely wasteful.  All the packaging and boxing up of things shipped in has to go somewhere and while the money isn’t here to recycle, the dump on the island is more than over-flowing.  No, not everything here is a paradise.  In fact, there are more practical problems and issues here than one could imagine.  Most people can see these clear issues, but don’t have the money or any ideas on how to resolve them.  The next generation of Marshallese is going to have quite the issues to deal with that much is clear.

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It is very difficult for any country to overcome their history and culture.  Many people can often become nostalgic about the worst part of their histories simply for the sake that it offers some sense of knowing who you are.  Americans rarely can understand this sentiment as we really don’t have too much of a deep history as a people.  Our country is very young and we have the luxury of starting on a sort of blank slate after the Native Americans were either forced off land or violently removed from much of American land.  The Marshall Islands’ history is one of tradition.  Traditionally each of the island Atolls had a unique group of people with some of their own traditions.  The two things that seem to unite Marshallese amongst all else are the Marshallese language and Christianity.  The official name of the country is The Republic of the Marshall Islands.  I suppose that in theory this country is a republic, but then there’s always reality with which to deal.   Historically, before modern life and a cash economy came to these atolls, each atoll had a chief called an Irojj.  They “owned” the land and their role was to take care of the people of their atoll.  It was a sort of feudal society as there was no money economy.  The Irojj was a first amongst equals and used his wisdom to ensure that all people of the island had what they needed.  This created a system like most hunter-gatherer societies have always had where private property not only didn’t exist but wasn’t a concept.  Most everything was shared and for the whole group to survive, everyone needed to pull their weight. 
This former style of life that somewhat still exists on some of the outer islands has been replaced for most Marshallese by modern life.  However, the Irojj’s still own all of the land, but now that land is worth money in a cash economy.  They can charge whatever rent they want to whoever they want and they reap all the profits simply by birth.  The piece of property that is worth the most in the Marshall Islands is on the largest of the atolls, Kwajalein.  It is worth so much because the United States still has a missile-testing base there and rents the land, not from the Marshallese government, but directly from the Irojj.  Therefore, the millions of dollars that the United States pays goes directly to the Irojj and rarely benefits anyone in Kwajalein.  In fact, Ebeye is the most populated island in Kwajalein and is actually the most densely populated place on Earth and is essentially a massive shantytown of 10,000 people.  The Irojj seemingly puts little, if any, of his profits into Ebeye, as his ancient duty suggests that he should.  In fact, the sad truth is that many of the Irojj’s take their profits and live abroad in Hawaii, California or Oregon. 
What occasionally happens on Majuro and the most populated atolls is that when the Irojj is low on cash, he will demand “rent” from those living on his land, as there is little or no public or private land in the Marshalls, it is all owned by an Irojj.  There is little in the way of “contracts” that bind this.  I’ve heard anecdotes of a renter paying for 5 years of rent to the Irojj and then the Irojj dying in 2 years and the new “landowner” comes looking for rent saying that that old agreement was with the last Irojj.  I haven’t studied the Marshallese Constitution in any substantial way, but this is seemingly all too commonplace to be illegal.  One of the major political parties here is for keeping the “rights” of the Irojj landowners and the other major party is a bit more progressive, wanting land reform and a more free and liberal economy where commoners can own land. 
The personally sad part in all of this for me is the tragic role that my country plays in this.  We keep paying 10’s of millions of dollars per year to the Irojj’s to use the base at Kwajalein as a missile testing center with the complete knowledge that the Irojj’s use this money for their personal gain and to keep this Oligarchy running.  It reminds me a bit of our silly support of the Saud family running Saudi Arabia.  We keep getting oil and cooperation from them and so we turn a blind eye to the human rights situation on the ground.  It is the same sort of situation often times here.  We keep our base, hand over money that could be developing a country to Medieval Lords who demand cultural and financial homage and the poor continue their struggle to gain simple human dignity.  I even heard a story that some Irojj’s demand that when you walk near them you get on your knees or if women do not wear their skirts all the way to their ankles they will face physical repercussions.  Of course, not all Irojj’s are like this, but the fact that it can happen legally at all is a travesty and the fact that we implicitly endorse this by again exchanging human rights for military bases is a shameful reality. 
            The biggest issue of all in the Marshall Islands is not one of opportunity or poverty, but one of science.  As global warming has persisted and the oceans have begun to rise, scientists essentially have predicted that small and flat coral atolls like the Marshalls will cease to exist in 50 or less years.  By this I mean to say that the entire country will lie beneath sea level and will become inhabitable.  What will happen then?  Where will the citizens of this country go?  Who will take them in?  When a country literally disappears from a map, do they still keep their government and voting rights in the UN?  Do you need land to have a country?
            All of these issues will need to be addressed in the future, since it is an almost certainty that some country, if not the Marshalls, will face this peculiar fate.  It has never been more important for this young generation of Marshallese to be dedicated to education and citizenship.  The many problems created in the last half a decade here will inevitably fall on their shoulders and I pray that I can inspire some of these young kids to take a hold of their country’s future and turn these struggles into a proper tropical paradise.