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Phosphate and Forced Relocation: An Assessment of the Resettlement of the Banabans to Northern Fiji in 1945
Authors:Julia Edwards
Institution:1. julia.edwards@hotmail.co.uk
Abstract:At the end of the Second World War, 1,003 Banaban and Gilbertese from Banaba Island in the central Pacific were relocated to northern Fiji. Colonial authorities had realised early on that, because of extensive and continued phosphate mining, Banaba Island would soon become uninhabitable. The community was forcibly and reluctantly moved 2,000 miles across the Pacific. This article assesses the post-war relocation of the Banabans; original colonial documents and correspondence are examined, interviews with elderly survivors of the relocation conducted and a study-team visit undertaken in Rabi Island, Fiji. Prior to relocation, the colonial authorities drew up a resettlement plan, and the successes and failures of this plan are also analysed. The Banabans suffered intensely from physical separation from Banaba Island and from a lack of familiarity with their new environment. They were also disadvantaged by conflicting views of opposing colonial jurisdictions and from a lack of long-term support after their initial resettlement phase. Today, elderly Banabans still yearn after Banaba Island, and the young are curious to visit their degraded ancestral home.
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