19801975197019651960195519501985 1945 1990 Timeline of Marshallese Relocations What Happened to Whom, When, and Possibly Why 1945 to 1990 Collected from.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Roanoke The Lost Colony. Most Americans know the story of the Lost Colony. It dates back to the time the Europeans began to settle on this free land,
Advertisements

A Geographic Portrait of The Marshall Islands with emphasis on Bikini Atoll.
Japan: In the Aftermath of Disaster. Affected areas Prefectures most heavily affected: Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaraki, Chiba Major cities affected:
Why We Celebrate Thanksgiving Carolyn Lucas Brook Glenn Elementary November 4, 2003.
Fred T. Korematsu Day January 30, 20? "As long as my record stands in federal court, any American citizen can be held in prison or concentration camps.
Town, Township, and Village Governments. Intro  Many counties serve only as election districts  Real work of local government carried on by others.
The Cuban Missile Crisis: The World on the Brink 1962
PILGRIM TIMELINE Learn about the voyage the Pilgrims took to America and beginning their life in America.
The Story of William Penn
Executive Order 9066 through Korematsu v. United States (1984)
Hiroshima after the atomic bomb explosion (NARA, Still Pictures Branch)
The Colonies Unite Chapter 8.
History 320: 6-Atomic America.
Japanese American Internment Camps 10 Camps in operation from
Afra AlKaabi 9B. Darfur is a region of Sudan, located in Eastern Africa directly south of Egypt and east of Chad. Darfur is located in the western portion.
INTERNMENT OF JAPANESE AMERICANS. Map of Camps ( )
Cuban Missile Crisis Tricia, Victoria, Meg, Krista Teacher: Jane Yeam Pascack Hills High School Tricia, Victoria, Meg, Krista Teacher: Jane Yeam Pascack.
Congressional Committees By: Julian Mullen. House Committees Jurisdiction.
Experimenting with Confederation
Unit 4 New Republic to an Expanding Nation
Articles of Confederation
President Hoover & the Great Depression. Warm-up Look back at your timeline. When was President Hoover elected? What major events happened during his.
Made landfall in Louisiana as a Category 3 storm with 127 mph winds Almost 2,000 confirmed deaths Majority of deaths occurred in New Orleans $
Development of the Virginia Colony. Development of Virginia & Tobacco  Virginia was the first permanent colony in North America. The Virginia Company,
Robin Bronen: University of Alaska Fairbanks Climate Change in Alaska Temperatures have increased an average of 3.5 Celsius in winter.
ExecutiveLegislative / JudicialDepartments.
Social Security Administration (SSA).  Social security is a social insurance program providing social protection, or protection against socially recognized.
Japanese American Internment Camps 10 Camps in operation from
Global History 12 The Atomic Bomb and the Bikini Atoll.
U.S Government Three Branches Three Branches of Government.
Japanese in America  In the 1880s, came to West Coast to work  Issei = 1st Japanese immigrant generation  Federal law prohibited Issei from becoming.
Chapter 3-The Meaning of Citizenship
Environmental pollution Chernobyl 1986 Dudyrev Bogdan 8.
Unit 3-Creation of a New Nation Lesson 11: Taxation Without Representation.
Puritan New England Chapter 2 Section 3.
Mururoa Atoll The use of the Mururoa Atoll by the French for nuclear testing, the role of government, the impact on the indigenous people.
Jennifer Opila, Radioactive Materials Unit Leader State of Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.
Bellringer Grab a packet from the front “Creating a New Nation.” Write down our mantra for today:
The Fifties Politics and culture. Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34 th President of the United States.
Internment of Japanese Americans Warm-up What reasons do you think the United States interned Japanese in the US during WWII? Do you think.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Indian Removal Essential Question: Why did Jackson use force to remove Indians.
U. S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration
The Executive Branch U.S Government By: Martina Espinoza.
Write everything in yellow. Start on page 27 in your notebook. Title it “Plymouth Pilgrims”
Shelter Training 08b – Belgium, 16 th –18 th November, 2008 based on content developed by p This session introduces the six transitional settlement options.
Taxation Without Representation
In 1620 in England, there were a group of people who all went to the same church, during the Protestant Reformation, they were called Puritans. The.
Trail of Tears 1838.
Cuban Missile Crisis The Cuban Missile Crisis was a confrontation during the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States regarding the deployment.
By Urmi, Dahsom, and Deema This is the Capitol Building.
 Why was there a call for a Constitutional Convention?
5.1 EXPERIMENTING WITH CONFEDERATION. MAIN IDEA: Americans adopted the Articles of Confederation but found the new government too weak to solve the nations.
Minority Movements: The Civil Rights Movement. Civil War: Results  13 th Amendment: 1865 – President Andrew Johnson  Abolished Slavery  14 th Amendment.
Warm Up: Write the question below and answer them as we watch the video. YTLIY Do you think this strategy would be.
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal. England established colonies in North America. As the population grew, colonists pushed further west into the territories.
Conflicts Over Land ESSENTIAL QUESTION What are the consequences when cultures interact?
Fears of a nuclear attack and spread of communism led to a Red Scare in the late 1940s & 1950s Americans grew worried about Communists & Soviet spies living.
The Korean War
Events leading to the American Revolution
Reminders: Unit: English Colonization Focus Activity:  Hello 
CHAPTER 19 SECTION 4 COLD WAR AT HOME.
Section 2-Polling Question
Chapter 6 Study Guide Answers.
Chris Mooney and Brady Dennis April 25, 2018, The Washington Post
Breaking News….
RIGHTS RESPONSIBILITIES Bill of Rights Vote Pay Taxes Obey Laws Serve on Jury Selective Service Life, Liberty, and Property Freedom of Religion.
Chapter 6 Study Guide Answers.
Origins of American Government Chapter 2.
Chapter 12 Lesson 2 Conflicts Over Land.
Shelter and settlement options
Presentation transcript:

Timeline of Marshallese Relocations What Happened to Whom, When, and Possibly Why 1945 to 1990 Collected from Day of Two Suns by Jane Dibblin and Marshall Islands Chronology at as well as quotes from Day of Two Suns and For the Good of Mankind, by Jack Niedenthal,

 The military governor of the Marshall Islands obtains the consent of a Bikini chief to relocate his people so that Bikini can be used for nuclear weapon tests. –"For the good of mankind and to end all world wars" - Commodore Ben Wyatt 1946.

 March 07, 1946: The U.S. Navy evacuates Bikini Atoll inhabitants to Rongerik Atoll.  May: Residents of Enewetak are moved to Meck Island in Kwajalein Atoll, and the Rongelap and Wotho people are evacuated to Lae Atoll for the duration of the Bikini tests.

 August 1947: An official investigating board recommends removal of the Bikini Islanders from Rongerik because of insufficient food and water. –Interview with Lore Kessibuki (Niedenthal, 2001): “While on Rongerik there were of course many problems for us to deal with as leaders. But the crisis in particular that stands out in my mind, even today after the many years have gone by, is the illness that many of us came down with as starvation became prolonged and excruciatingly painful.”

 President Truman signs a directive for the removal of Natives from Enewetak.  December: The Navy moves 145 Enewetak inhabitants to Ujelang prior to U.S. testing nuclear weapons at Enewetak. –“The Americans came and started to tell us about Ujelang atoll as yet another option…We liked this idea…and decided to go along…” –“Unfortunately…after they built the housing on Ujelang…the US government decided to move the people of Enewetak to Ujelang…as Enewetak would be used to test US nuclear weapons.” (Niedenthal, 2001)

 March : The Bikini evacuees are moved to a temporary camp on the Kwajalein Navy base. –Interview with Kilon Bauno (Niedenthal, 2001): ”We were frustrated by the small amount of space in which we were permitted to move around. We had to depend on the US military for everything. We were afraid of this alien environment and almost from the day we got there we began thinking about other places to live.”

 November 2, 1948: After Bikini leaders select Kili Island for a settlement, the Navy moves the Bikini community of 184 people to Kili, which lacks a lagoon.

 The natives now living on Kili cannot be moved to Bikini because the atoll satisfies operational requirements for a possible supplementary site.  The Navy transports 169 Ujelang people 100 miles farther away from Enewetak for a temporary relocation as a precaution before Operation Ivy nuclear tests

 September 1954: K. D. Nichols, the AEC general manager, informs the JCAE that the DOI and the Navy Department are currently taking steps to settle claims with inhabitants of Bikini and Enewetak atolls for the use of their lands.  According to the AEC, fish there unsuitable for human consumption. The AEC also reports that radiological damage to these atolls that will require several years before humans can inhabit these lands.

 March: The U.S. Navy DDE Philip evacuates 64 inhabitants from Rongelap and eighteen Rongelapese from Ailinginae and takes them to Kwajalein  Utrik Islanders return home

 Rongelap currently is judged unsuitable for habitation because of radioactivity in the atoll's northern islands "somewhat above" exposures recommended by the National Committee on Radiation Protection (NCRP)  It is recommended to keep the Rongelapese on Ejit Island for at least another six months.

 The Rongelapese living on Eljit (island in Majuro) are returned to their home island after deliberations about the levels of radiation.

 Inhabitants of Roi Namur Island in Kwajalein are relocated to other islands also located in Kwajalein atoll (Ebeye and Ennuubirr)

 Marshallese of Lib Island are moved to Ebeye in order for Lib to become an impact zone for ICBMs from California.

 1967: An anthropological study of the Bikinians and their leaders reveals that most are dissatisfied with Kili and wish to return to Bikini.  Approximately 300 Enewetak people on Ujelang board a Trade Trust supply ship and demand to be moved to Majuro. They are angered by the lack of food and poor conditions on Ujelang.

 1968: President Johnson publicly announces the decision to resettle the Bikinians. Tommy F. McCraw, a health physicist of the AEC/DOS tells the Bikinians that the food from the Bikini Atoll lagoon and Eneu Island is safe to eat but that villages will be built only on Bikini and Eneu Islands.  King Juda passes away on Kili Island

 A group of displaced people from Kwajalein atoll undertake the first of many ‘sail-ins’ back to their home islands in protest of living conditions on Ebeye.

 1969: The DOD begins its cleanup of the islands of Bikini and Eneu and projects that completion will require six months.  The AEC certifies that the Bikini cleanup project has been "satisfactorily completed." The Bikinians petition the Trade Trust high commissioner for their immediate return to Bikini and $100,000 in further compensation for damages to their atoll and the discomforts they suffered from relocation.

 1972: Three Bikini families move back to Bikini with nearly 50 Marshallese construction and maintenance workers.

 1974: A group of Bikini people refuse to return to the atoll on May 25, 1974 until they receive appropriate compensation for the past 25 years.

 1978: Relocation of Bikini residents to Kili Island begins. 139 people living there are evacuated.

 October 1980: Enewetak people begin to return home to their atoll, Then…  100 islanders return to Ujelang because of lack of coconuts and other fresh fruits

 The Marshall Islands Legislature passes a resolution supporting a relocation request to the U.S. Congress by the Rongelapese.

 1984: The people of Bikini file a class action suit against the executive branch of the U.S. government.  The plaintiffs seek declaratory and equitable relief, the radiological cleanup of Bikini Atoll, the restoration of the atoll to its former condition, and resettlement of the Bikini people to their atoll.

 Because of a fear of lingering contamination, 327 Rongelapese move from Rongelap to Mejatto Island, in the Kwajalein Atoll.

s  1990s: Tourism push throughout the Islands and infrastructure development, continued cleanup. –1996: “The people of Bikini decided to open the atoll to divers to provide an economic base for the possible future resettlement of their homeland.” (Niedenthal, 2001)  1990s: The United States Congress provided $90 million to decontaminate Bikini and establish plans for its repopulation.

The 2000s  September 11, 2000: Petition Presented To The Congress Of The United States Of America Regarding Changed Circumstances Arising From U.S. Nuclear Testing In The Marshall Islands  2003: Compact Agreement Vote