 The National Broadcasting Company and its affiliated stations present the Pacific story. This is the story of the Pacific, the drama of the millions of people who live around this greatest seas where the United States is now committed to a long-term policy of keeping the peace. This is the documentary account of the situation in the Pacific, of the men and events which are today influencing world affairs for generations to come. Guam, new outpost in the Pacific. In the shade of a cathedral overlooking the plaza, there's fine and agaña. And talk about the thing that was closest to us. Do you think America will ever make our citizens fathers? The Americans have been here 40 years now. We do not even have a delegate in the American Congress as Hawaii does. And the Alaska and Puerto Rico do. Are we never to have any voice in our own government? That is hard to say Pablo. It is hard to say. As Pablo and the priest talked, I looked out over the green of the plaza with his border of coconut palms. I looked at the buildings around the square, the government house, the barracks, the courthouse and dawn hall which used to be a public school. It had looked like this ever since I could remember. The Spaniards were here for 300 years and they did nothing for our people. Except intermixed with our blood as all the others have done. Intermixed. One of my grandfathers was a Chinese. One of my grandmothers a Mexican. And my great-grandfather a Spaniard. I looked at Pablo and the priest. They, like me, were mixtures of the many peoples who had come to Guam and mixed with our Chamorro blood. There are nearly 25,000 of us now. We should have the same basic liberties guaranteed to other Americans. The people of America are a mixture of many nationalities. That is right Pablo. But we are not regarded as America. We should be regarded as Americans' father. And we should have the same liberties as other Americans. What do you say Jose? I say we should be regarded as citizens. We are not interested in independence as the Filipinos are. But we should be citizens of the United States. Yes. Yes, we should. Yes. Yes, we should. This is the way we talk. Whenever we meet. Citizenship. It grew more precious to us because it was so far out of our grasp. The Americans who came to Guam were friendly with us. With all the Chamorros. And we were friendly with them. And through their eyes we saw that we were really not far different from them. See, this is just like back in the state. Picture houses, cafes, banks, post office. Of course, Agana here has only 11,000 people. I know, but still. It is the largest city on Guam and it is a pleasant city. Did you see the governor's palace built by the Spaniards? A palace? A real palace? Yes, it was built by the Spaniards long before you Americans came here. Yeah, I did hear something about the Spaniards being here before us. In those days before the war, we used to wonder what would happen to Agana. To all of Guam. If war came to the Pacific. You can be sure that any enemy the US has in the Pacific will come here. Guam is the largest landmass between Hawaii and the Philippines. 36 miles across and it's 225 square miles. We might get some help from the Philippines, but we're 3600 miles west of Hawaii. And this is too far for help. The war came just as we always thought it would. It came on the morning of the same day that Pearl Harbor was seen. Ruins for Shenzhen! Everyone Ruins for Shenzhen! When the planes were gone, there were fires in a thousand places. They have bombed the air base at the Pacific. The naval yards, the military installations, and the Marine barracks. Are they destroyed, father? No, their aim was bad. But the oil tanks at Tume were destroyed by the fire that followed. Oh, they did not keep Agana. Why was that, father? I think they have plans for Agana. Everyone knew that the Japanese would come back. The whole island was alive with preparation, but... We had no planes, no strong fortifications, and we had few defenses. We waited. At 2 a.m., 40 hours after the first air attack, they came ashore. They came ashore at Agana, at several other places. And we waited for them along with the emergency survivors. They drove us back to the plaza. There we are! Coming through there! They have seen them! They drove us from the plaza. The last thing I saw as I left was the priests lying there on the green grass dead. That same morning, five hours after the first attack, the Japanese flag was raised over the plaza. But we fought for three days more in the hills before we were taken and brought back to Agana. If it works, everyone will bow each time he passes a Japanese. The United States is defeated. Hereafter, one will be considered Japanese. You will therefore destroy all American flags. Japanese flags will be given to you all. You will keep them and protect them. And whenever you are called out for a parade, you will bring your flag in period so that all may see it. Abloh and I were put into a labor battalion. All Chamorro males between 14 and 60 were forced to work. From time to time we were called out to parade with our flags. Those who refused were taken away. None of us knew what became of our own people. Those who escaped were brought back, told us of their torture, how the others died. We suffered for lack of food. And when we objected... Now I'll let you... All I did was to say that you cannot learn the rules. This way, we will use other methods. But they could not destroy our allegiance to the United States. And we made up souls to the familiar tools. Oh, Mr. Sampson... Stop it! Stop it! If you sing that song again, your necks will be cut. Understand? You will return to your works. In the next two and a half years we saw little of the foods of the island. Tarot, coconut, melons, pineapples, breadfruit, corn, bananas. Remember, Jose, when we used to eat fish from our lagoons and chicken and pork... They allowed us two pounds of rice every ten days. Some soy beans, salt sugar. That was all. We were hungry and weak. Many of us became ill from malnutrition. Many died. When are the Americans coming back? I don't know. If they do not come soon, all of us will be dead. They will come some days. We waited and worked and sang. And one week would not seem the words we thought of. We're hungry. Stop that! Stop it! What is that? What? That drone. Bombers. Where are they? It's coming from over that way. Is that they are? Look at them. Bombers. They must be Americans. They are American planes. They are American planes. Look at them. Those are dive bombers. They were like competing cats. They could not stop us. We scattered out through the valleys and up through the hills. But within a few days, the Japanese military police second-page hire were in the hills, roaming the castles. They hunted us down in twos and threes and brought us down into the valleys. And they marched out in large groups back to our work. If you show the same stupidity again, it will cost your lives. The American farmings are no more than nuisance raids. If they return, you will stay at your work. I warn you now that if you leave your work again for any reason whatever, your nets will be cut. Now, get back to work. Take the kite. Some of us got the blins of the damage of a gun. They have smashed some of the buildings around the Plaza de España. They have smashed nearly all the buildings around the Plaza. What will happen to Organia next time? Do you not know? This was June 1944. And now, it was July. The American bombers came back again and again. An emergent fleet moved in close and shelled the Japanese shore information. Ten thousand tons of American shells and bombs hit the island. The Japanese called us all together, lined us up in columns and marched us into the hills. Where are they taking us? We must expect anything. Perhaps they're going to shoot us. They must be nervous or they would not line us up so quickly in a matter of minutes and march us up like this. They know the Americans are coming soon. Stop that talking over there. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. All your nets will be cut. They will march us into a stockade camp in the night. And there they locked us up. We milled around with a guard standing over us. What will they do to us from the American's land? By the fury of the distance found, we knew the Americans must be back. We have locked up thousands of the other civilians, the Tullos Woff and Manu Yon. That must mean that the real fight for the island is over. The Japanese guys are gone. All the Japanese guys are gone, what? Look, they're all gone. Maybe this is a trap. Maybe they're waiting for us to try to leave so they can shoot us. That night we walked out of the camp. We made our way down through the valleys. And there on the beaches, but the Americans were at that stage. To keep us out of danger, they headed us all together on refugee camps. When the fighting was over, they permitted us to leave a few at a time. I headed back for a time. I stood near the cathedral where the priest and Pablo and I used to talk. And I looked out across the plaza de España. The government house was wrecked, the barracks, the courthouse, dawn halls. The American flag was flying where the Japanese flag had flown. And all around it was the destruction done by the American guns and explosives. They had gone here. I knew it was gone. We're going to make Guam the greatest advance base in the Pacific. When we first heard this, we could not imagine how much our island would be changed. We still need all possible help. We are therefore setting up a labor priority board to fill the needs of the various commands. All tomorrow those who wish jobs should contact the board in the Guanyas. 5,000 Hamoros volunteered for work. All you people in this group will work at Apra Harbor. Follow me this way. All right, you men in this group will work on Northwest Therapy for the heavy bombers. Come this way along the bank. Pablo and I went to work at Apra Harbor. Look at those stretches out there. Yes. It was always said that the U.S. would never leave an Apra Harbor. Because it would be regarded as a specific as an act of aggression. Look, they're not only dredging. They're making it deeper. Look, look out there. They're widening it. Oh, here comes this form. Will the harbor here be big enough for the big American ships? Sure. There's nearly seven square miles of water out there. When we get those breakwaters in, the war is right about to build. We'll have the best harbor in this part of the Pacific. The big bulldozers are shaved out of terrain. The big trucks move mountains, rivers, coral sands. Contemporary tractors roared for mornings and nights. I am going to work overtime tonight, Jose. Ah, to get the bigger pay, huh? Oh, not only that. To get my lunch free. Well, I will work overtime, too. Come on, men. Come on. Work. Work. We worked along with the season. They were all strong men. Red peas. And when our work was done, we stood in line with them to get our food. And we sat down and ate with them. How and how are they getting along with Northwest Airfield up there? Northwest Airfield. What is this? Are you kidding? That's the big B-29 field they're putting up in the northwest corner of the island. Oh, some of our guys are working on it. It's going to be the longest runway in the world, 8,500 feet, over a mile and a half long. Then they're really going to bring those big planes here. Oh, listen. That's only one of the B-29 fields. They're putting another one up in the neighborhood of Paddy Point. And they're building three other new fields. We're going to make a face out of this island. We could hardly realize how our island was changing. Very soon we saw more and more planes in the air over us. We got so we could identify them with the different kinds of bombers and transport planes and one kind of fighting plane from another. Now, I tell you something, there's more traffic out of the new field that I can't hear than out of LaGuardia, a field in New York. It's a fact. Plans for planes carrying mail in, millions of tons of it. And carrying wounds out every day between here and Hawaii, Manila, Iwo Jima, and a dozen other places. Brother, as a base, this is going to be it. When our work at Opera Harbor was done, we stood by and watched the great ships come in. Well, that'll give you some idea of what kind of a port this is going to be, Jose. I've never seen so many ships here. You see, what we've got here now is not only a harbor deep enough to accommodate big ships, we've also got docks, fuel supply, repair facilities, everything they've got at Pearl Harbor. As a matter of fact, from now on, Guam here is going to be at Pearl Harbor. In the next few months, we saw things on Guam that we never knew Guam would ever have. 360 miles of new highway on our island of only 225 square miles. We now have four fleet hospitals and three army hospitals with accommodations for nearly 10,000 patients. Medical supplies are coming in by air every day, even hold blood, and patients are being flown out. The Americans were here. Guam was an American island. But we, the people of Guam, were not Americans. Look at those big trucks, how they go. Yes, such plenty, but always full of full ammunition or something. America must be one. They're not more nimble scam. Guam became his headquarters. We knew when he came that big things were going to happen. Everyone talked of what he said. Here's our fleet base now and after the war, whether we like it or not. We are responsible for the peace in the Pacific, and we must take that responsibility. Agagna was still in ruins. Our homes, many of them with tile roofs and running water and electric lights were gone. Temporary housing was put up for us. Well, they are Jose. That ought to do until you can get a house that you can live in permanent. Yes, it is all right. That roof ought to keep the rain off, you like nothing. Coconut patch will keep the rain off? Yes. That's what I say with the time being. Of course that floor is kind of rough, done a giant coconut log, but it's strong. Yes. What gets me is the way you guys can weave those coconut prongs in and out like that to make the walls. Very simple really. Now, one of these days the war is going to be over. And then you can go back and get yourself a new house in Agagna. When do you think the war will be over? We're getting ready to get in the wakes now. Pablo and I went to work in a new civilian hospital in Agagna. The doctors and nurses and all the other attendants were Navy people. I hope they can do something for the sick children, Jose. They say these have made cradles for them and the children are getting good food now. They're so sick. They went hungry so long. The little ones suffered. Many of them died before the big drive started. Look at them, B-29s up there. What do I tell you guys? Every day we saw the great bombers overhand. We saw more and more of them. And ships came into the harbors and such numbers we could not keep track of them. The supplies must have come in by the millions of tons. We worked every day and every day the tempo grew faster. Men in supplies, ships and planes and equipment of all kinds coming and going faster, faster, every hour of the day. And we worked. Don't worry no more. You're paid back now. Get me! And will we be permitted to go back to Agagna? It may be some little time yet. Our houses of coconut fronds are falling down. The rain leaks through and the logs of worm-eating. You must be patient. I have found the place where my house was. Yes, well, a city planning commission has been set up to work out plans for the reconstruction of Agagna. Must I go to them? They will take care of you and I. Then I can build another house? Well, yes, but of course you will have to build it out of salvage. That is all that is available for construction. In the passing months we saw an island change from a wartime base to a peacetime base. We saw the gradual slowing down. Fewer ships coming in. Fewer planes near the men. How's it going, Pablo? Good-bye to you, Charlie. Good-bye, Charlie. We fixed this place of yours up now. See that you keep it up, eh? The high-press says Guam here is going to be an important place from now on. Will all the big airfields be kept up and the hospitals and all that? That's what they're talking about. I don't know how much of it's going to be kept on a wartime footing. But anyway, it's fixed up now in the Navy Support. So you guys behave yourself, eh? Yes. Are you going back to Brooklyn? Yes, sir. Boy, that's the place for me. That's where I'm a solid citizen. Yes. Charlie, do you think the United States will ever make us citizens? You guys want to be citizens? Oh, Rylan has been under the United States for nearly 48 years. We want to be citizens like, well, like the people of a conquered country. Like, yes, we want to be citizens. Well, why not? Well, I'll see ya, fellas. So long, fellas. Most of the Americans who were here during the war are now gone. Others have come. We can see that Guam is to be a big base, that it will not go back to what it was before the war. We hear rumors. Listen, Guam here is going to be one of the biggest bases in the whole world. The United States is here for keeps. What they're going to do with some of the other Pacific Islands, nobody knows. But they know what they're going to do with this one. We know what they are going to do with our island, Jose. But what are they going to do about us? I do not know, Pablo. I wonder when the American Congress will do something about Mr. Farrington's bill. Yes, Mr. Farrington's bill. Mr. Farrington, they delegate from Hawaii the American citizenship for the people of Guam. And Mr. Grant, the congressman from Indiana, has introduced a bill into the American Congress also to provide for Guam the same kind of self-government as Hawaii and Alaska and Puerto Rico has. We are waiting to see what will happen. But we'll remember what happened to the last bill introduced several years before the war. A group of Guamanians went to Washington to try to get the bill through the Congress. We have failed. And you went there at your own expense. We told them that we had no support, whatever, from the government of the island. Do they understand that you had come there to try to help to get the bill through? Yes, yes, they understood that they do not want us to be citizens. Mr. Farrington's bill was introduced into the House more than a year ago. They will not have taken some kind of action by this time, Jose. Some kind of action, yes. Why do they wait? We have proved our loyalty to Uncle Sam? Yes, we have proved our loyalty. For heroism and action, I award you this medal. Zamora's for the Italians in Sicily and Italy. For distinguished service above and beyond the call of duty, I award you this honor. Zamora's for the Nazis in France and Germany. For outstanding bravery against overwhelming enemy odds in the fighting of the Pacific, I award you this cross. Zamora's for the Japanese on Guam and on many other islands on the road to Tokyo. Our people were starved and tortured, and yet we resisted. Even after the American government had been driven from Guam. And when the Americans came back, we worked with them and did all we were able. And still, we have no voice in our government. Well, some Guamanians are in the government. The Department of Education and Labor and Commerce and Industry have Guamanians on their side. Yes, this is right. And the Civil Courts have Guamanian judges. This, too, is right. But the criminal courts have Navy and Marine officers for judges. And the laws are the laws of the naval military government. The naval governors made the laws, and well, they could change them without notice to us. It must be understood that because of the war, Guam is still under a naval military government. Yes, but this is a little different from the naval government we had before the war. Of course, it will take time. Many things have happened since we used to sit in the shade of the cathedral, overlooking the plaza de España, and talk about these things that is closest to us. I stand here now, looking over the ruins of our capital city of Argania, destroyed in the war between the United States and Japan. Today in due course, Argania will again be rebuilt. I wonder if at that time, tomorrows like Pablo and the priests and me, will still be sitting in the shade of the coconut palm talking, this thing over and over, and wondering when somehow it will change. And we will have the civil liberties guaranteed under the Bill of Rights of the Constitution, and be seated in the United States of America. I've been listening to the Pacific Story, presented by the National Broadcasting Company and its affiliated independent stations, to clarify events in the Pacific and to make understandable the crosscurrents of life in the Pacific Basin. The Pacific Story is written and produced by Arnold Marquess. The music was scored and conducted by Henry Russell. The principal voice was that of Lou Krugman. Programs in this series of particular interest to servicemen and women are broadcast overseas through the worldwide facilities of the Armed Forces Radio Service. This program came to you from Hollywood. It is heard in Canada through the facilities of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. This is NBC, the National Broadcasting Company.