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Guam Information
 
HISTORY
ECONOMY
THE PEOPLE
RELIGION
EVENTS
CULTURE
ACTIVITIES
GOVERNMENT
ENVIRONMENT
ATTRACTION
 
 

French Polynesia


Guam is the largest and most southern island in the Mariana Islands archipelago in the western north Pacific Ocean, covering 212 square miles with a population of some 150,000 people. The most developed island in Micronesia, it serves as a transportation and communications hub and is regarded as the gateway to Micronesia. There is traffic congestion, fast food restaurants, large shopping centres, a university, lavish resort hotels and a large U.S. Military Base.

In contrast, southern Guam is made up of hills ranging in altitude up to 1,300 feet (Mt. Lamlam) and has sleepy villages, good sandy beaches and an abundance of butterflies and rainbows. The central and northern part of the island consists mainly of a limestone plateau with steep cliffs dropping down to a narrow coastal shelf.


HISTORY
 


The Chamorro, of Malay origin, migrated to Guam about 3500 years ago and were there to greet Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan when he sailed into Guam's Umatac Bay back in 1521. Things got off to a bad start when the Chamorro fed and watered Magellan's crew and in return took whatever they could find on the ship. This traditional Chamorro custom of give and take didn't go down well with the Spaniards and before departing, Magellan's crew had killed seven locals and burned 40 houses trying to retrieve a rowboat. Guam and its neighbours were branded Islas de los Ladrones (Islands of Thieves) from then on and the name stuck well into the 20th century.

A new phase in Guam's history began in 1668 when Jesuit priests arrived from Spain on a mission to spread the word. From their base in today's capital of Hagatña, the priests - along with a small Spanish garrison - were well received at first. But as Catholic fervour increased and traditional island hierarchy was eroded, the Chamorro went on the attack. A string of bloody rebellions in the late 1600s, along with outbreaks of influenza and smallpox, saw Chamorro numbers plummet from an estimated 100,000 to about 5000. Most of the survivors were women and children. Spanish soldiers and Filipino men were then bundled in to restock the population, marking the end of the pure Chamorro bloodline.

Following Spain's defeat in the Spanish-American War of 1898, Guam - along with Puerto Rico and the Philippines - was ceded to the USA with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. For the first half of the 20th century, the isaldn was administered by the US Navy except for a brief period beginning in 1941 of 31 months of Japanese occupation during WWII, the only US territory occupied by the Japanese in World War II, when it was taken over for 31 months from 1941. American forces recaptured Guam in 1944.

The Organic Act of 1950 accorded Guam's population with US citizenship and self-government powers, but not the right to vote in national elections. The citizens of Guam went about electing their first governor in 1970, and then two years later headed back to the ballot box to elect their first delegate to the US House of Representatives (albeit a non-voting one). Plebiscites held in 1982 and 1987 indicated that locals were seeking to redefine their relationship with the US, but little has since been achieved on that front.

Today the US presence in Guam is strong, with military facilities dominating the landscape and more than 23,000 military personnel and dependants on the island. Despite years of lobbying to free Guam from its rather blurry 'unincorporated' US territory status, the White House still hasn't bothered to grant the island Commonwealth recognition similar to that of Puerto Rico. Recently-released census information has indicated that about a quarter of the population lives underneath the poverty line.

In April 2002 an earthquake measuring 7.2 on the Richter scale hit the island, followed in July by a typhoon that left many areas without power and running water. In December of that same year the super typhoon Pongsona hit Guam, causing massive property damage which once more brought Guam to its knees. With the help of plenty of Red Cross and FEMA aid, the resilient island has in 2005 all but recovered.

ECONOMY
 


The economy depends on US military spending, tourism, and the export of fish and handicrafts. Total US grants, wage payments, and procurement outlays amounted to $1 billion in 1998. Over the past 20 years, the tourist industry has grown rapidly, creating a construction boom for new hotels and the expansion of older ones. More than 1 million tourists visit Guam each year. The industry had recently suffered setbacks because of the continuing Japanese slowdown; the Japanese normally make up almost 90% of the tourists. Most food and industrial goods are imported. Guam faces the problem of building up the civilian economic sector to offset the impact of military downsizing.
THE PEOPLE
 


A unique island, Guam combines old and new to make a colorful montage of people, land and heritage. Countries from around the world have left a little something behind on this island: language, foods, songs, religions and much more.

The indigenous people of Guam are "Chamorros," with the balance of the population a mixture of mainland Americans, Chinese, Filipinos, Japanese, Koreans, Micronesians and others. Chamorros are U.S. citizens who proudly retain many of the old island and Spanish traditions, which reflect three centuries of Spanish rule. The predominant language here is English, and currency, postal services and most banking services are U.S.-based.

RELIGION
 



RELIGION


Over the span of three centuries, Spanish culture became dominant on Guam. The Spanish ships stopped in Guam each year between Mexico and Manila. In 1668, the great galleons brought Jesuit missionaries to Guam. In short order, the Roman Catholic Church became the focal point of activities, as the missionaries converted islanders to Christianity while teaching them to clothe their bodies, cultivate crops and raise animals, in addition to introducing new methods of cooking and building.

Today, most of Guam's population attends and  observes the protocols of the church. Every village celebrates a feast day of its patron saint with a mass, followed by a great fiesta of food, song and dance. Additionally, family groups hold christening parties to mark the beginning of a baby's life in the church. Fandango parties take place the evening before a wedding, and anniversary novenas commemorate the death of a loved one. All these celebrations include lengthy religious services sometimes lasting for days and always ending with a fiesta filled with food, drink and good will.

There are some 20 Protestant faiths represented on the island as well, which include independent and non-denominational groups. The local papers carry complete listings of all local churches.

Andersen Air Force Base has two base chapels, which offer a variety of Catholic and Protestant worship, education, study and fellowship experiences. For information on Jewish activities, contact your respective base chaplain's office.

EVENTS
 



Guam's grandest holiday celebrations happen on July 21 - Liberation Day, when the entire population seems to hit the streets for a parade, followed by fireworks in the evening. Also in July is the island carnival at Y'pao Beach Park. From April all the way through to October the villages of southern Guam hold their yearly fiestas, which turn sleepy hollows into wild 'block parties', food and beer is on the house, and everybody's welcome. One of the best known of these is the three-day Malojloj Fiesta, starting May 16, in the historic town of Inarajan.

CULTURE
 

Guam, like many other islands, has many different kinds of  culture.  Fiestas and other get- togethers represent the culture and tradition because people from different places, no matter what the age, can attend these cultural parties.  Another tradition the Guamanians have here is Liberation Day in July.  This day is when they celebrate that the Americans took Guam back from the Japanese.  This is an important holiday at the end of July.     When you visit more of this site you will gradually learn more about culture and traditions on Guam.  This is a picture of a tropical dusk on Guam.   Other things that Chamorros, the original people of Guam, have for their tradition are Guam dances, weaving, fiestas, and food.  And don't forget the legends.  You might find some of the Guam legends familiar to American stories. 
Friends and relatives prepare the food.  They have different types of food from main dishes to desserts.  For example, roast pig, chicken, barbecue fish, seafood, red rice, potato salad, bananas, taro, fenadeneglota, and vegetable salad. 
ACTIVITIES
 


Since Guam's greatest attractions are in the surrounding sea, scuba diving is high on the list of things to do. Underwater visibility is excellent and there are plenty of fishies and reefs. Surfing is also popular. Windsurfing and snorkelling paraphernalia is available for hire, as are canoes and kayaks. For the less sporty, the Atlantis submarine takes the paying public on tours of one of Guam's best reefs. On dry land, golf is the premier sporting pastime and there are seven courses on which to flaunt your plus fours. There's plenty of good swimming and hiking, especially at Tarzan Falls in central Guam, where such pursuits are known as boonie stomping - Guamanian American for venturing off the beaten track.
GOVERNMENT
 

In 1898, Spanish rule on Guam came to an abrupt halt, when Capt. Henry Glass captured the island at the start of the Spanish-American War. The 1898 Treaty of Paris allotted Guam to the United States, under Department of the Navy administration. The United States sold the rest of the Marianas to Germany. After Germany's defeat in World War I, Japan received a mandate to govern the Marianas.

During World War II, 5,000 invading Japanese soldiers quickly forced the small U.S. military contingent on island to surrender. Guam remained under Japanese rule until July 21, 1944, when U.S. forces liberated the island. Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz then became Guam’s governor.


In 1950, Congress passed the Organic Act, which gave Chamorros U.S. citizenship, and Guam became an organized unincorporated territory of the United States. The president appointed the governor, and the administration fell under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Interior. Guam's first popularly elected governor took office in 1971. Guam elected its first delegate to the U.S. Congress in 1972.
ENVIRONMENT
 

The largest and southernmost island in the Mariana Archipelago, Guam lies about 3800km (2356mi) southeast of Tokyo. It was created by an uplift of undersea volcanoes and has two distinct geological regions north and south of a narrow waist. The northern half is a coral limestone plateau, while the southern half is a generally prettier mixture of volcanic hills and valleys. Guam's only indigenous mammals are a couple of species of bats, and the island's birdlife has been devoured by the infamous brown tree snake. Accidently air-lifted in 50 odd years ago, the snake has cast an eerie silence over Guam's forests by polishing off all nine species of native birds - a disaster that also has huge ramifications for the life cycles of endemic plants and insects.

The island's steady tropical climate maintains temperatures at a pretty constant 25-30°C (77-86°F) all year round. May, June and July are the hottest months. Guamanians really only talk of two seasons, the dry and the rainy. The dry season (fanumnangan) runs from December to June and then it's rainy time (fanuchanan) for the rest of the year. From June to November, Guam is also nestled in the hatchery of the western Pacific typhoons.
ATTRACTION
 


Hagatña (formerly Agaña) has been the centre of Guam ever since the Spanish first set about remodelling the island on behalf of God. The town is small enough to explore on foot in an afternoon and there are plenty of parks and historic buildings, among them is Casa Gobierno, the Governor's Palace.

Don't miss the revolving statue of Pope John Paul II on the site where the man himself held mass in 1981; it puts the miniature Statue of Liberty to shame. In the southeast of the park, a statue of Chief Quipuha is condemned to survey the congested traffic of the main thoroughfare, Marine Drive.


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