Chamorro Community Building
This week I am in California meeting with Chamorro organizations in Long Beach and San Diego. When I was in graduate school in San Diego, I worked very closely with several of these organizations. It has been nostalgic coming back and catching up with people and learning about what new projects they are working on and what are new ways that diasporic Chamorros are creating community. All of this reminded me of a question that a friend of mine asked me several years ago about what community building is like from a Chamorro perspective. Below is part of my answer tomorrow.
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It is important to think of community development not from
any neutral or abstract stance, but rather take seriously the context that one
intends to develop within, and by context I a huge number of things that must
be considered both in the past and present. In conceiving this context, and
forming it in a productive way, one must be prepared to bring into the analysis
data, concepts and perspectives both commonsensical and unpopular or critical.
One of the most frustrating aspects of how we speak about
community in Guam today is the way this sort of speech is almost completely
detached from the contemporary and historical context of life in Guam. What I
mean by this is that, when people speak of how to improve Guam it is almost as
if they are possessed by a ghost which has recently arrived on a Continental
flight from Washington D.C. or Honolulu. It is obvious, that despite the fact
that they may be from Guam, that they may know Guam, that what they propose to
fix Guam or to plan for Guam, belongs to someone else, was designed and
developed with somewhere else in mind, and not Guam. The proposals they form
are either completely detached from the island, and have no concrete relevance
(or any relevance is simply accidental), or their proposals are based on the
perceptions of those outside of Guam, and tend to treat the island in very
simplistic, basic, callous and degrading ways.
This is most clear if we look at the economic literature on
Guam, which is almost entirely build upon the dangerous yet pervasive
assumption that Guam and other islands in the Pacific, have nothing. Well, that’s not entirely true, these islands have coconuts, but that’s about it. This
perception plagues not just Guam but the entire Pacific, and can be found as a
fundamental assumption amongst both scholars in the region as well as
governments and economic elites. If one accepts the premise that these islands
do have nothing but coconuts, then the failing, stagnant economies that are
scattered throughout the Pacific make perfect sense. Developing an economy,
within this mindset, means that one must import everything in order to develop. Not just labor, not just capital,
not just technology, but most importantly ideas,
concepts, dreams, goals.
In the same way that education in Guam has historically been
a simple importation of ideas and curriculum with little policy-based or
structural attempts re-define the purpose or intended community
imagination/history that the educational system is meant to teach, we find the
same poor planning logic in proposals for community development in Guam.
Community development in Guam, which is meant to be for Guam, means fundamentally
stepping over and leaving far behind the principle that “What is good for the
United States, is good for Guam.” While at the level of official government
discourse and chamber or commerce of elite business speech this is not simply
an obvious point, but is either woven into the fabric reality itself or a
mantra through which prayers for more military increases are chanted. The
scorecard of American intervention and impact on Guam is mixed, despite this
sort of ridiculously over the top rhetoric of American awesomeness. Any notion
that whatever is good for the United States is good for Guam must be destroyed
early on and completely obliterated for any real community development to take
place. The reasons for why this principle is so untrue range and can be found
in terms of geography, economy, history, culture, colonization and so on. For
too long, Chamorros and other on Guam, have accepted this principle for the
basis for planning the future of the island, and we can see this in small and
large ways throughout the island at the political, educational, economic and
social levels.
Wrapped up in this principle, is all manners of American
superiority, exceptionalism and colonialism. When these notions spread into
different spaces and spheres of life in Guam, they take on the ridiculous,
infectious and detrimental edge, that can be summed up by adding just a few
more diminutive words to the earlier principle, namely, “since the United
States is so much better than Guam, anything
which is good for the United States, must be good for Guam.” This was the
logic that led the Naval Government prior to World War II to assume that
whatever curriculum students in the United States had would be fine for Guam.
This is the key to developing and planning community in
Guam, breaking with the assumptions which emanate and invade from the United
States, offering liberation from poverty, backwardness, miseducation,
corruption and waste. Once one can break this assumption, then one can see the
island’s problems, history, future, untainted by colonizing faith that all our
problems can be solved by simply adding more America to Guam, by simply taking
whatever they have used or don’t want anymore and using it here.
Referring back to the context I began with, this means that
when making plans for how to develop community in Guam, one must contend
seriously with colonization. One must
be cognizant of the unequal power relationships between the United States and
Guam, and how this affects either positively or negatively the economy, how
this either positively or negatively affects its ability to build solidarity or
relationships with its neighbors, how it affects its own ability to manage its
resources and social/political and economic infrastructures.
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