4083 Draft copy of paper presented at 10th Pacific Science Congress, Honolulu, Hawaii, August 25, 1961. except with author's permission. Not to be reproduced or quoted The content will be included eventually in a book on the Kili situation, date of publication as yet uncertain. CHANGING FAMILY ORGANIZATION AMONG EX~-BIKINI MARSHALLESE a Leonard Mason Professor of Anthropology University of Hawaii, Honolulu In the summer of 1957, when I went to Kili Island, in the Marshalls group of Micronesia, I had intended to undertake a study of how certain attitudes become established among children and youths with respect to the advantages and disadvantages of life on the atoll of Bikini. In 1946, just over a decade earlier, the grandparents, parents, and older siblings of this younger generation had been evacuated as a community from Bikini Atoll in order that the United States government might use the lagoon and islands as a site for testing nuclear weapons. The community had previously been quite isSlated from the rest of the Marshalls, and some 200 residents formed a remarkably inbred and culturally conservative group regarded, by other Marshallese as an inferior and somewhat naive people. In the early months of 1948, two years after their resettlement on Rongerik, another atoll in the relatively dry northern Marshalls, I spent a week or more on Rongerik Atoll at the request of the Government to determine the condition of their adjustment to the new environment. The atoll's resources had proved inadequate for permanent settlement on a subsistence basis, and the community hed undergone a frightening experience during which the local leaders had attempted a number of innovations to meet the crisis. The entire population was removed as soon as possible and by the end of 1948, after a waiting period on Kwajalein Island, they were settled on the single island of Kili in the southern Marshalls. Here they continue to live at the present time. Adjustment to the natural conditions on Kili has not been easy, but this is for quite dirferent reasons than prevailed on Rongerik. This aspect of their resettlement has been described elsewhere. In 1949, about one year after the group's arrival on Kili, I was able to spend another brief period with them, enough to gather certain demographic and other information for comparison with that gained carlier on Rongerik. In the course of this field work I remarked significant differences among individuals and family groups as to their attitudes toward Kili and their remembrance of Bikini. Some hated the new island, for good reasons, and harked back comstantly to Bikini as the place to which they wished to return-this was impossible because of the consequences of atomic weapons tests. Others accepted the fact of their resettlement and faced the future on Kili with an optimistic and constructive view. At that time I wondered what would be the attitudes of individuals born on Kili after 1948 who would never have the chance to know at firsthand what the Bikini of their elders had been, or might be, like.

Select target paragraph3