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The Island PopulationsEarly white visitors divided the South Sea region into three great areas which they called Polynesia (“many islands”), Melanesia (“black islands”), and Micronesia (“tiny islands”). These units are based partly on geography, but mainly on differences in the physical appearance, speech, and customs of the native islanders. PolynesiaThe Polynesian islands form a great triangle in the central and eastern Pacific. They are the homes of tall brown-skinned Polynesian peoples, best known of the islanders to Americans because the Hawaiians are of this type. There are about 360,000 Polynesians today. Our troops going to these islands find the Polynesians friendly and attractive, as they were back in the days of Herman Melville (at Tahiti and the Marquesas) and of Robert Louis Stevenson (at Samoa). They are usually fisherfolk and gardeners, as were their ancestors, and live in picturesque villages along the palm-lined shores. But they have changed greatly through more than a century of contact with Western ways. They have long been Christians. Church, school, and trading store are parts of their village life. Around the ports, and in Hawaii and New Zealand, where Polynesian groups have had most contact with whites, they have found acceptable the ways of Western civilization. Many of them go to high school and some to college. In New Zealand, Polynesian Maoris have been cabinet ministers. Melanesia
The islanders here are dark-skinned, as the name Melanesia suggests. Bushy-haired Melanesians live mostly on the coasts, heavy-featured Papuans (a name coming from a Malay word meaning “frizzly haired”) more in the interior of large islands, and short peoples here and there in the deep mountains and forests, some of them pygmy-size Negritos, “little Negroes.” These peoples of Melanesia, numbering close to two millions, differ amazingly in language and in custom from district to district. Their traditional ways are often so unlike those of Western countries that it is hard for an outsider to understand them. The islands of western Melanesia, with their malarial coasts and often hostile peoples, were avoided by early voyagers, so that they were not opened up until late in the nineteenth century. In the high, almost inaccessible interiors of New Guinea and New Britain there are still groups whose culture is that of the Stone Age. But the peoples living along the coasts and in the river valleys are by now mostly converted to Christianity, and are well along in the footsteps of the Polynesians. Our troops have found them invaluable as carriers, stretcher-bearers, construction workers, guides, and even guerrilla fighters. The eastern Melanesians in Fiji and New Caledonia are well adjusted to civilization. MicronesiaThe Micronesian islands, lying north of the equator from the Gilberts to the Marianas and Palaus, are of special interest to Americans at this time. They are small and scattered, most of them being coral atolls that rise only a few feet above the surrounding ocean. The Micronesian peoples of the central and eastern islands, sometimes known as “Kanakas” from a native word meaning “man,” are much like the Polynesians in appearance. Those in the west, called “Chamorros,” are generally shorter and more Malay-like. Especially in Guam they have become strongly mixed in modern days with Filipino and Spanish strains. Altogether the total Micronesian population is about 110,000. The western Micronesians have been under white influence for nearly four centuries, and nearly all of them have long been Catholics. Those farther east were brought into contact much later, largely through visits by American whalers and the work of American missionaries. Most of there are Protestants. The peoples of the Marshalls and eastern Carolines have had their schooling largely from American mission workers, even in Japanese days, and are no strangers to our customs and ideas. In Guam the Chamorros have moved ahead rapidly under American administration, but most Micronesians tend to be conservative, as might be expected of people whose life is closely adapted to getting along in such small islands, and who have felt the weight of one alien ruler after another.
Vigorous PeoplesThe ancestors of all these islanders came from Southeast Asia by way of the Malaysian islands. Long ago, the short Negrito folk, and also people akin to the heavy-featured Australian aborigines of today, crossed over the island steppingstones into New Guinea and Australia. The modern peoples of Melanesia have been welded mainly from these stocks, though with later, more Caucasian-like elements coming in along the coasts to help in forming a “Melanesian” racial type that is different from the “Papuan.” Much later, probably in the early Christian era, the ancestors of the Polynesians struck east in large ocean-going canoes. Making possibly the greatest voyages ever known to man, they discovered and settled every habitable island in the eastern Pacific, and left traces of their passing on almost every unusable speck. Observers two or three decades ago prophesied that the islanders would soon die out. Supporting this belief was the fact that, at the earlier stages of contact with whites, new diseases and other death-dealing influences took a heavy toll. The population of many islands was cut by a half or more. In some areas, notably in parts of the Solomons and New Hebrides, numbers are still going down, so that he visitor finds villages with few children, or deserted entirely. But in most parts of the South Seas an increase is now under way. Birth rates have stayed high, being geared to conservative sex and family customs. Health work and better adjustment to modern conditions, meanwhile, are pushing the death rates further and further down In many places the population is now increasing very rapidly and the villages swarm with children. Indeed, in some of the town areas, and on confined coasts and small islands, there is now a looming problem of over-population. Already some governments have had to resettle needy families in the more sparsely populated districts. |