Pacific children of US servicemen for studyPosted in Articles, History, Media Archive, Oceania on 2011-11-21 01:10Z by Steven |
Pacific children of US servicemen for study
Otago Daily Times
University of Otago, New Zealand
2010-01-05
Allison Rudd
World War 2 brought two million United States servicemen to New Zealand and many Pacific Islands. Inevitably, many formed liaisons with local women and fathered possibly several thousand children. What happened to those babies, and, more than 60 years later, where are they now? Allison Rudd talks to University of Otago historian Prof Judith Bennett, who has won funding to try and trace the all-but forgotten offspring.
Judith Bennett was doing some research when she got sidetracked.
She was compiling information for a book on the environmental effect of the war on Pacific Island countries when she came across references to the mixed-race children of local women and United States servicemen.
Her interest was piqued.
“I was very curious because I could find very little on this topic.
“So it seemed to me there were questions that needed to be answered: How were these children accepted?
“Did their parentage affect their land rights?
“Did it affect their marriage prospects?
“How were their mothers characterised in their own societies?
“How did the US Government view marriage?
“How did the indigenous people view these relationships?
“Were they profitable, were they shameful, or were they a mixture?
“What have been the long-term effects of mixed parentage?
“These children would have looked different – their fathers were white or African American.
“What impact did that have on them as they were growing up and when they were adults?”
Now Prof Bennett hopes to satisfy her curiosity, having secured a $917,000 Marsden grant to embark on a three-year research project…
Read the entire article here.