Guampedia.com September 2019
Know our island. Know our history. Click to know! –– Volume II. Issue IX.
Conference Reworks, Recontextualizes Islander History This Month in International scholars and aficionados of Pacific Islander history two weekends ago converged at the University of Guam for the 4th Marianas History Conference. Close to 300 presenters, volunteers and members of the public gathered at the twoday weekend conference to share insights and ideas about the past, present and future of the people and cultures of the Mariana Islands. In Saturday’s first keynote address,Tina Taitano DeLisle proposed thinking about and creating a counter-history to the ones written and promoted by the nations that have battled over and occupied the Marianas for centuries. This thread, the idea of retelling the archipelago’s history from a native and oceanic perspective, wove its way through many of the conference presentations. Such retelling,
incidentally, is much of what Guampedia has been doing for more than 10 years. And while CHamoru culture, Guam, and new island-centric research were the conference’s main focus, speakers such as Rene Escalante and Elicita Morei helped place the Marianas story in a larger Pacific Islands context and offered examples, from the Philippines and Palau, respectively, of how the Marianas’ native CHamoru and Rafalawash can take steps toward ever greater self-knowledge, self-expression and self-determination.
Epublish your presentation!
Interested in epublishing your 4th Marianas History Conference presentation? Please contact Nathalie Pereda at pereda. nathalie@gmail.com. Deadline is Tuesday, 1 October 2019.
History
419 years ago - On September 15, 1600, Admiral Olivier Van Noort, in command of four Dutch ships, stopped in Guam and exchanged pieces of iron for fish, fruits, rice, fowl, and water during their two-day stay. About 200 canoes met the ships.