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- <text id=89TT1295>
- <title>
- May 15, 1989: American Scene
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 15, 1989 Waiting For Washington
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 12
- Pago Pago, American Samoa
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Whose Nation Is This Anyway? A half Polynesian idyll, half Rotary Club protectorate
- </p>
- <p>By Pico Iyer
- </p>
- <p> All the pillars of American civic righteousness are here: the
- YWCA choir, the Boy Scouts, the 4-H club, the church-sponsored
- floats, even the pom-pom girls strutting their stuff to the strains
- of Happy Days Are Here Again. It could, really, be any All-American
- small town putting on an Independence Day parade on any village
- green. Except that this truly is, in the strict anthropological
- sense, a village, and the green here is really, really green. And
- the girls are dressed in grass skirts, and so too are many of the
- boys, with sashes of flowers across their oiled chests and woven
- tree bark around their ankles. The 50-man long boats are racing
- past mist-wreathed rain-forest mountains, and the muddy park is
- taken over by cricket. But not the game of white-flannel elegance
- as it is played at the Marylebone Cricket Club in London. Oh, no!
- This is tropical, Technicolor kirikiti -- buxom girls in lemon
- yellow shirts and sky blue skirts thwacking around a homemade
- rubber ball with a three-sided bat, while supporters rhythmically
- chant and dance and beat vigorously on biscuit tins.
- </p>
- <p> And the Fourth of July is still two months away!
- </p>
- <p> What is this? Where are we? Good question. Technically, we are
- in American Samoa, an "unincorporated territory" of seven tiny
- volcanic islands administered since 1951 by the U.S. Department of
- the Interior. Physically, we are midway between Hawaii and
- Australia, on the only piece of American soil south of the equator,
- and on the very edge of the international date line (this is one
- of the last places on earth where the day begins). Officially, we
- are celebrating Flag Day, the 89th anniversary of the first raising
- of the Stars and Stripes on this palm-fringed South Sea bubble. And
- truthfully, we are in a kind of green-fringed gray area, neither
- here nor there.
- </p>
- <p> For American Samoa is not quite American and not quite Samoa:
- it sends a Congressman to Washington, but he is not allowed to
- vote; its 38,000 people are counted as "U.S. nationals" but cannot
- cast ballots for anything except island leaders. In the early
- 1960s, the Federal Government started pouring planeloads of money
- into its castaway dependency, partly in the spirit of idealism, and
- partly with an eye to its unmatched, and strategically useful,
- harbor (last year, Washington sent $45 million in direct aid to a
- community with one-sixth as many people as Mesa, Ariz.). Yet the
- U.S. has never bothered too much about the legal niceties of its
- anomalous territory. After President William McKinley took over the
- main island in 1900, fully 29 years passed before Congress deigned
- to make the transfer formal.
- </p>
- <p> Legally, then, "the Peoria of the Pacific" remains in as
- mingled a state as its notorious climate of simultaneous rain and
- shine. How, for instance, can American laws of inheritance be
- applied to a culture in which 90% of the land is communally owned
- by extended families? And how can due process be served in a world
- in which it is regarded as impolite to refuse a request, especially
- from a matai, or all powerful village chief? "We try," explains
- Grover Joseph Rees III, the former Chief Justice of the High Court,
- "to blend Western procedures with Samoan substance. But often, of
- course, it's not so simple -- because the substance is based on the
- procedure. Our usual rule is that statute trumps custom, but custom
- cannot trump statute." Nevertheless, local leaders are still
- bewildered, and often enraged, when federal law is imposed on their
- textbook haven of taboos and tattoos.
- </p>
- <p> On first appearances, American Samoa is anyone's dream of a
- South Seas paradise, its narrow jungle roads lined with hibiscus,
- its deserted white beaches overlooked by windblown coconut palms.
- Waves break gently against the main road, and the girls wear
- flowers in their hair. And at night, in every village, local
- matrons slouch against wooden posts in thatched, open-sided oval
- buildings, engaging in a languorous game of Bingo.
- </p>
- <p> Yet if the island is part Polynesian idyll, it is also part
- Rotary Club protectorate. The map at the airport here is sponsored
- by the Lions Club, and the local hospital is named after L.B.J.
- Days of Our Lives and Nightingales are shown on TV, and Tiger Beat
- is available at the nearest newsstand. All the props of the
- American Dream are here, right down to Korean grocery stores and
- Mexican food. American Samoa has a ZIP code, a Radio Shack, a
- Democratic caucus; the kids wear LIFE'S A BEACH T shirts, dial 911
- for emergencies and sing along to Tiffany on the local AM station;
- there are yellow school buses, American-style license plates and
- U.S. mailboxes. This last item is especially strange, since mail
- is not even delivered house-to-house here.
- </p>
- <p> And all across the islands, amid the run-down pool halls and
- basketball courts and liquor stores, stand high rebukes to the
- tropical sultriness -- Mormon and Catholic and Baptist and
- Congregationalist churches, white and erect in the holiday
- sunshine. Here, in fact, is the strictest kind of Southern Bible
- Belt: villages enforce curfews during evening prayers each day, and
- beaches are often closed on Sundays. Teenagers sashay around in T
- shirts that say HAPPINESS IS SHARING THE GOSPEL, and the official
- motto of the island is "Let God be first."
- </p>
- <p> No surprise, then, that it was here in Pago Pago that Somerset
- Maugham set his famous confrontation between the missionary and
- Sadie Thompson. Or that discussions of Samoa's moral -- and
- cultural -- identity continue as heatedly as the much publicized
- debate between Margaret Mead's classic vision of pastoral innocence
- (Coming of Age in Samoa) and Derek Freeman's revisionist account
- of violence and rape (Margaret Mead and Samoa -- The Making and
- Unmaking of an Anthropological Myth). "Being bilingual and
- bicultural doesn't mean you have to be schizophrenic," says Bernie
- Oordt, who taught at a local high school for twelve years. "As long
- as you have a basic bedrock, a strong system of values, you should
- be big enough to incorporate both cultures. And I think these
- people have a very sound sense of who they are, tied up with family
- and community."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the fact remains that the majority of young American
- Samoans leave the island within a year of graduation, often to
- return disenchanted with both the mainland and their island
- homeland. And alcoholism is a perennial concern in a country where
- beer sometimes seems as much in abundance as water. In the
- cricket-chattering dusk, John Kneubuhl, a grand old man of the
- island, who went from here to Yale and then to a screenwriting
- career in Hollywood, recalls how he used to play hide-and-seek in
- the ghost-filled dark as a boy. Now, he says, traditions are
- fading. "It's like a volcano getting ready, not exactly to explode
- but at the very least to ooze out."
- </p>
- <p> To see what is peculiar to American Samoa, one need travel only
- 40 miles across the waters to Western Samoa, a relatively forgotten
- independent island that has four times as many people as its
- American namesake, but no congressional support. In Western Samoa,
- people speak English in the gentle, sea-lapping cadences of the
- South Pacific; in American, they favor the twang of Beach Boys and
- Valley Girls. In Western, residents play the genteel old colonial
- game of lawn bowling; in American, they converge on a twelve-lane
- bowling alley. And in Western, the roads are lined with pigs, while
- in American, they are crowded with Jeep Cherokees. Although the 76
- square miles of American land is clearly more affluent, it is also,
- in a curious way, more derelict. "You'll notice that the ceremonies
- in Western Samoa are much more relaxed," says John Enright,
- American Samoa's Folk Arts Coordinator. "Over here they're more
- uptight. There's always a fear that they're losing their
- traditions, or that they won't get things quite right. I think of
- this island as a kind of retail store of Samoan traditions, with
- Western Samoa as the warehouse."
- </p>
- <p> Thus the local song that boasts "Samoa, there's no place like
- you" rings all too true for some of the palagis, or foreigners, on
- the island. At American Samoa Community College, Philip Grant
- gamely leads Laborday Fatali and a group of other flamboyantly
- named students through a discussion of Rousseau and Romanticism,
- only occasionally thrown off by a modern sensibility ("What does
- self-serving mean?" "Well, the gas station is self-service"). Yet
- Grant, one of those gypsy scholars who move from country to
- country, finds Samoa considerably more alien than his last posting,
- in Beirut. "In Lebanon," he says, "there was at least some bridge
- with the West. But here you feel totally cut off. The culture is
- 3,000 years old and very complex and so different from ours that
- we wouldn't know how to begin to penetrate it."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the strangeness is both spiced and complicated further by
- stubborn traces of the familiar. On Flag Day, a legal secretary
- suddenly re-emerges as a taupou, or ceremonial virgin. A U.S. Army
- man appears amid a group of spear-shaking warriors in lavalava
- skirts, fierce tattoos on many thighs. A former Hollywood bit actor
- resumes his role as the "talking chief" of Leone, leading his
- villagers through hymn-inflected island chants and primal dances.
- And then, just before Governor Peter Coleman, Congressman Eni
- Faleomavaega and various other dignitaries get ready to join in the
- final swaying dance, a village chorus sits on the ground, chants
- its age-old traditions and dramatically, for its climax, flashes
- -- what else? -- an American flag.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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