Setting an Agenda–Quilting the Patches and Stitching them Together

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Setting an Agenda: Quilting the Patches and Stitching them Together

 

Marianas History Conference, Keynote Address, June 2012

 

“One Archipelago, Many Stories” is the theme of the conference

 

 

But the reverse of this theme is also true: “One story (history), many islands”

 

 

The agenda for Marianas history

 

 

Examples of gap-filling

 

 

Where do we begin in filling in the gaps?

 

 

1) Ancient History

 

Who are these ancestors of ours?  Where did they come from? Why did they come to these islands?  How did they live?  What are the earliest settlements in the archipelago?  What can we infer about the way in which they spread throughout the islands?  What plants and animals did they bring with them?  Can we track the changes in food cultivation and animal life over the centuries?

 

Can we summarize in lay terms what we know from archaeological, linguistic and physiological evidence?  Are we ready to draw inferences from bits of evidence to paint the bigger picture?

 

2) Precontact Times

 

What were the patterns of social organization before the Spanish entered the scene?  What do we know about village life?  What were the belief systems that guided Chamorros at this time?

 

What were the principles of political organization in the archipelago?  Villages forming temporary alliances with one another?  Was the village founded on ranked matrilineages, as in Chuuk and other islands in Micronesia?  Or was there a stratified political system accompanied by the so-called “caste system” that Spanish observers thought they saw?  What models from other island groups might be used to suggest possible social systems that may have been operative in the archipelago?

 

What do we know of the traditional religion?  Was the veneration paid to ancestral skulls in the Marianas similar to the old practices found in Kiribati?  What do we know of the spirit world?

 

3) 19th Century

 

We have plenty of facts, mostly observations of outsiders who came to visit.  But how do we get beyond the facts to get a sense of how people lived?

 

Social history of Guam after 1817, the opening of the island to other nations.  We know of the arrival of whaleships, the appointment of a non-Spanish port captain, and other events during this period. But what was daily life in the village like for the people?

 

What was the impact of deportees from Spain and the Philippines on the society during the last 30 years of the century. Thanks to the work of Carlos Madrid and others, we know the main facts of the era.  But did this change the course of events in the Marianas in any way?

 

Resettlement of Chamorros on the northern islands, especially Saipan. How was this initiated and for what reason?  What was the impact on the Carolinians who had already begun moving to the islands?  How much intermingling was there between Carolinian and Chamorro people during the end of the 19th century and the years following?  Was there a two-tier society that directly resulted from this?  How did this influence German policies when they took over from the Spanish?

 

4) 20th Century

 

I’m not sure what the gaps are in our knowledge of this period. (But the program for this conference offers us many good leads.)  Can we help one another with this?  These are a few suggestions.

 

What was the impact of the political separation of Guam from the rest of the Marianas on social history during the early years of the 20th century?  How did this affect families with branches in both places?

 

How has the breakdown of the homogeneous village system, a long mainstay in both CNMI and Guam, affect community spirit, the ways of handling village problems, and law and order in the islands? How did it affect the role of the village commissioner or mayor?

 

Product for the People

 

 

Francis X. Hezel, SJ

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