The Bikini Project

Table of Contents

The Bikini Project – NEW

Introduction

Part 1: The Home Page

            In June 1946, the United States tested two nuclear bombs at Bikini, a small island in the larger Marshall Islands. My father, Will Whitmore, was a civilian participant in this project known as Operation Crossroads. He was one of 40,000 Americans who took part in the project. The devastation of the small island, the displacement of 167 Bikini Islanders and the demise of their culture have haunted me for many years. The Bikini Project is my personal endeavor to understand this period in American history, the consequences of Operation Crossroads for the Bikini people and my father’s voluntary agreement to participate in a project that brought suffering to many people.

Recognition of Will Whitmore’s Participation in Operation Crossroads
Will Whitmore, 1902-1959

            The boxes that contained my father’s Bikini memorabilia were deeply buried in a family storage room until the winter of 2018 when I decided to open them with much trepidation and to take a look. I discovered the six-month daily journal in which my father described his experiences at Bikini. I read the journal at least three times. I peered at his image and the photographs he made of the explosions. I perused the newspaper clippings and his letters to me when I was six years old. In the boxes, I found three reels of 16mm film and the news reel he projected during his public presentations after he returned. I  began to organize my father’s Bikini material. I read about Bikini, asked questions and searched for answers.

Part 2: Operation Crossroads

            I hoped to add a human element to our understanding of Operation Crossroads. I wanted my father to be a real person, not just one of the many who participated in Operation Crossroads. I also wanted to know what happened to the Bikini people after they were evacuated. 

           

Will Whitmore and His Family

Will Whitmore and His Family, 4/21/1946

            Will Whitmore and his family celebrate Easter April 21, 1946 in Manhasset, New York. It is the day before Will leaves for Bikini to participate as a civilian in Operation Crossroads.  Will is my father, and at the time of this photo, I am five years old. My sister Jean is 18 months old. Allene is Will’s wife and my mother.

            We were a typical suburban American family.  Will was an advertising Manager for the Western Electric Company. He commuted by train to New York City and returned home in the evenings in time for dinner with his family. This was his daily routine.

Will Leaves For Bikini

Will Whitmore leaves New York for San Francisco on American Airlines
Will Whitmore leaves San San Francisco for Bikini on the USS Avery Island

            April 22, 1946, my mother, sister and I drove Will to Laguardia Airport to catch his American Airlines plane to Washington, D. C.  Will reported for duty, received his orders, his inoculations and his identification card, # 551. Then, Will flew to San Francisco and left for Bikini Island on USS Avery Island. He was one of the 40,000 Americans who participated in Operation Crossroads and the first two of 67 nuclear tests in the Marshall Islands.  

            As a member of Code 980, Will would prepare technical reports, write manuscripts, coordinate press releases and keep the official and public channels informed of activities. He believed he was embarking on a great adventure, and he believed he was making a contribution to the “good of humanity and to the prevention of all future wars”.           

Arrival at Bikini Island

Will Whitmore arrives at Bikini Island, June 1, 1946

            On June 1, 1946 Will’s ship reached Bikini Island. He writes in his journal  “…Reduced speed all morning and then about 1430 a faint smudge on the horizon, more ships faintly seen. Looking through glasses.  A low strip of green against the sky, a line of white underneath. Sure, it’s an island and those are palm trees. …Finally inside the lagoon. … The anchor goes down.”

The Detonation of Able

Detonation of Able, July 1, 1946

            At last, the day Will was awaiting arrived, Able Day, Monday, 1 July 1946.”We all got into life jackets about 15 minutes before HOW.  The heat was insufferable, the sea and air almost dead calm. Sweat poured off me.  … I had my camera held in my left hand with the hand grip and leather strap around my wrist. My hand was so sweaty, I could hardly hold on to it.  … HOW minus 20 seconds. The seconds seemed like minutes.  … There it was a small red ball of fire.  I swung my camera to it.  Around the small central ball of fire there formed another, it grew swiftly to tremendous height and width, … The great perpendicular tower of white cloud was forming fast and rising swiftly, the mushroom formed and above it … a flat sort of dish like gleaming white cloud. … 

Journal Entry, Will Whitmore, July 1, 1946

“My camera going all the time, shoot, rewind shoot.  … ”My shirt and trousers completely wet with sweat. Hard to keep my head. … “just silence and the ever climbing cloud … about two minutes after the flash a low, almost inaudible rumble.” It was Operation Crossroads, and the fourth atomic bomb had just been detonated at the island of Bikini. Able followed an initial test at the Trinity Site in New Mexico and the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan during World War II.

The Detonation of Baker

The Detonation of Baker, July 25, 1946
The Detonation of Baker, July 25, 1946

Baker Day, Thursday, 25 July 1946, the fifth atomic bomb is about to be exploded. Will says, “I was on the bridge before 0800. Took movies of the whole show.  As the voice of Abraham clicked off the minutes and then the seconds, five seconds, four seconds, three seconds, two seconds, one second and then the blast, … A great column of water went right straight up and a mist shot out laterally… . Up and up went the column of water, and a big white cloud seemed to form and sit atop the water. Then the column began to spill over from the top and a tremendous curtain of water hung in the air and then slowly descended. It seemed a minute or more before the the big booOOOooooMMMM came to us, … .  A mist hung over the lagoon for at least half an hour after it was over.”

Journal Entry, Will Whitmore, July 25, 1946
Will Whitmore’s Reaction to the Detonation

            Sunday, July 28, Will’s journal entry is ominous. Will states, ”At about four we left the lagoon and cruised in open water all night. The water had increased in radioactivity to the point where it was best to get out. We came back to our earlier berth Monday morning.”  Thursday, August 1: “… Only six ships have been inspected. the rest are still too hot for men to board.”     

Termination of Operation Crossroads     

            Operation Crossroads ended prematurely August 10, 1946. The detonation of a third scheduled atomic test, “Charlie,” was deemed too dangerous. High radiation levels and concern for the sailors’ safety were the main reasons for the cancellation. There were also concerns about the inability of the geiger counters to register plutonium.  

Nevertheless, the United States continued nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands including the detonation of 23 nuclear weapons on Bikini Atoll.  March 1, 1954, the United States exploded the hydrogen bomb, Bravo, in the northwest corner of Bikini Atoll. Bravo was the largest nuclear bomb ever detonated, 1000 times more powerful than the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Three islands were pulverized by the explosion and no longer exist. Radioactive debris rose more than 20 miles into the air and fallout spread over much of the Marshall Islands.

Weighing Anchor

            Wednesday, August 7, 1946 was “Getaway Day.”  Will states, “ The Captain called muster right after breakfast,” and the USS Avery Island “weighed anchor,” headed straight for the channel and passed Enyu Island on the way. August 21, 1946, the USS Avery Island slipped under the Golden Gate Bridge and docked in San Francisco harbor. Will states I… “got my orders signed and finished packing and left the Avery Island for good. When we pulled away from it I thought I should have some emotions about leaving the ship for good but there was nothing.”

Returning to the United States     

From San Francisco, Will flew to Chicago where he met my mother, sister and me. We traveled together to Manhasset, New York where we lived in a three bedroom home with a nice garden. Our home seemed comfortable and secure.

The Seafaring Legacy

            Although Will wrote in his journal that he had “no emotion” when he left the USS Avery Island for good, it is clear Bikini Island made a lasting impression on him. At Bikini, Will learned to love the sea. He had grown up landlocked in Lockhart, Texas and was fascinated by the outrigger canoes the Bikini people built, the largest and some of the most seaworthy outriggers in the Marshall Islands. He was astounded by the ability of the Bikini people to navigate their craft in all kinds of weather by merely reading the ripples in the sea.      

            After Will left Bikini, he too wanted to sail. Manhasset, New York where Will lived was located on a protected bay that emptied into Long Island Sound and from there, flowed into the Atlantic Ocean. The Sound offered entry to many ports, rivers and safe harbors.    

            Will named his sail boat “Bikini”. It was a Mount Desert Island craft built in a small workshop in Maine. Our family spent many summer weekend sailing together. Will’s book shelves were filled with tomes about sailing and navigational adventures.       

Photograph by Gene (Jean Whitmore) Marsh, Will Whitmore Sails his Boat, “Bikini”

The Death of Will Whitmore

            Will’s life seemed secure, filled with good family times and the enjoyment of sailing. He and his family felt safe, and their way of life was reliable and predictable. However, unknown to Will or his family, radiation was slowly taking a toll on his body. It would be several years before the extent of the devastation was apparent. Will Whitmore died of cancer October 20, 1959 at the age of 57. His doctors believed the cancer was caused by exposure to excessive levels of radiation at Bikini during Operation Crossroads.

My Question

I have read Will’s journal many times, and I have pondered the question: Why did Will participate voluntarily as a civilian in Operation Crossroads, a project that brought suffering to others and set the stage for nuclear proliferation and intensified the threat of nuclear war?

The Times

If I remind myself that Will was born in 1902 and was 44 years old when he left for Bikini, I am better able to understand his decision to participate in Operation Crossroads. Ideas I take for grated now had not yet reached American consciousness in 1946. The peace and civil rights movements would not occur for another 20 years. America was ethnocentric, segregated and prided itself on military strength. When Will received the invitation to join Operation Crossroads, he jumped at the opportunity. Allene, his wife, supported him like most wives at the time supported their husbands. She told him it was “a chance of a lifetime”, and he should go. In the 1940’s little was known about the longterm effects of radiation exposure. Neither Will nor Allene knew he would die twelve years later, mostly likely from radiation exposure during Operation Crossroads.

World War II Era Patriotism

In the World War II era, the United States was seeped in patriotism. Many men felt a duty to their country including Will. However, Will was rejected for military service because of his age. I speculate that he viewed the opportunity to participate in Operation Crossroads as a second chance to perform his duty.

Belief in the Prevention of Future Wars

The belief that the development and possession of nuclear weapons by the United States would deter other nations from instigating wars was prevalent. However, during the last 75 years since Operation Crossroads, nuclear weapons have proliferated. On September 23, 1949, Moscow Radio announced that the Soviet Union had developed an atomic bomb.Today, nine nation possess nuclear weapons, and together they have tested more than 2,000 nuclear weapons. The threat of a nuclear disaster from intent or accident has become more, not less real.

United States Exceptionalism

The United States exited World War II as an “exceptional” and powerful world leader with a felt obligation to lead and protect other nations. The belief in United States exceptionalism is vividly portrayed in the film “Operation Crossroads, March 1946” (Please see below). The development of nuclear weapons is presented as a great accomplishment and a necessary choice for the United States. Will was, undoubtedly, susceptible to the propaganda.

The film: Operation Crossroads, March 1946

The Disregard for Indigenous People

In his journal, Will writes about beautiful sunsets, the night sky and fantasizes a simple and peaceful life on Bikini. However, he does not mention the Bikini people who sacrificed their island “For the Good of Mankind”. He does not reflect upon the demise of their homeland, their culture or their health risks from radiation exposure. His journal focuses instead on the detonation of two nuclear bombs, Able and Baker. The goal was simple. Test bombs and leave.

On August 6, 1945, the United States detonated the atomic bomb, Little Boy, on Hiroshima. Three days later it detonated a second atomic bomb, Fat Man, on Nagasaki. It is estimated that 140,000 people, most of whom were civilians, died at Hiroshima, and 74,000 died at Nagasaki. Thousands more died from radiation sickness and the longterm effects of radiation exposure in the days, weeks and years following the explosions. The atomic bombing of Japan and the deaths of more than 200,000 people, most of whom were civilians, was a horrific crime against humanity committed by the United States.

At the time of Operation Crossroads, The United States was aware of the humanitarian implication of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The United States and Will ignored or reframed the humanitarian issues to avoid the horror and allowed nuclear testing on Bikini to proceed. The welfare of the Bikinians, and ultimately the rest of the world, was insignificant in comparison to the perceived importance of the United States’s mission at Operation Crossroads.

An Answer to My Question

Will was not an evil person who intended to contribute to the suffering of others. Will was, instead, an ordinary man susceptible to the propaganda that justified Operation Crossroads. He lacked a humanitarian perspective on human rights and most likely never thought about the consequences of Operation Crossroads for the indigenous people whose homeland was devastated. Will’s personal story and the Bikini Project in general illustrate the importance of careful thought, reflection and responsibility regarding the longterm consequences of our actions. To my father I would say, “I believe we have a duty to others, not to our county per se, but to our global community. And I believe we must be vigilant and discerning of the missions we choose to support.”

Jane Whitmore video by Brian Cowden

Part 3: The Bikini People

Bikini Island and the Bikini People

            Located in the Marshall Islands, Bikini is situated in the central Pacific Ocean halfway between Hawaii and Australia. Prior to Operation Crossroads, Bikini was a beautiful Island. It was endowed with white beaches, turquoise blue waters and natural resources sufficiently abundant to feed its people and provide the resources necessary for their way of life.

Schematic Map illustrating the Location of Bikini, “Operation Crossroads” 1946

            In March 1946, 167 people, from 11 family lineages, lived on Bikini Island. Juda was their chief, an alap, head of a family lineage. The Bikini Islanders were known to be a communal and generous people who cherished their culture and lived according to the life values of reciprocity and kindness. Kan drikdrik kong yokwe, “We share what little we have with love”, and Jiban don, “we help each other.” Operation Crossroads, however, ended the traditional culture of the Bikini People and rendered the Island uninhabitable in perpetuity as a result of radiation contamination.

            The United States and The Cold War

In 1946, the United States, a highly sophisticated western nation with a large military and complex social society, was embroiled in a Cold War conflict with the Soviet Union. The testing of nuclear weapons was deemed to be of utmost importance. 

            Seeking a location for nuclear tests far from its shores in order to protect Americans, the United States determined that Bikini Island, because of its isolation and protected harbor, would be the most desirable place. The fact that Bikini was an inhabited island, apparently, was not a concern for the United States.

The Bikini People Leave their Island “For the Good of Humanity”

United States Commodore Ben H. Wyatt Speaks to the Bikini People through an Interpreter.

            Negotiations with the Bikini people took place on the sandy beach of Bikini under palm trees in front of houses made of pandanus fronds. United States Commodore Ben H. Wyatt spoke to Chief Juda through an interpreter. The Bikini People were at an extreme disadvantage during these negotiation because they had no knowledge of the destructive power of nuclear weapons. In addition, there were no words in their native language to explain the dangers of the situation they were asked to accept. They had no legal representation nor written documentation to protect their rights.

Wyatt requested that the islanders move to a yet-to-be determined location and make the ultimate sacrifice of their sacred home “for the good of humanity and to prevent all future wars.” They were also told that they would be able to return to their home after the tests were completed. Trusting “all was in the hands of god”, 167 Bikini Islanders agreed to be displaced so that nuclear testing could proceed on their island. Operation Crossroads, however, ended the traditional culture of the Bikini People and rendered their island uninhabitable in perpetuity as a result of radiation contamination.

While the video documents the exodus of the Bikini People to their new home, it also presents the idealism regarding the mission of the United States and the condescending attitude towards the Bikini people.

Photograph by Carl Mydans, Chief Juda and his family, Bikini Island, 3/1946.

While the video documents the exodus of the Bikini People to their new home, it is is overly idealistic regarding the mission of the United States and condescending of the Bikini people.

Rongerik Island

            Rongerik Island was chosen as the new home for the Bikini Islanders. From the perspective of the Bikini people and their traditional beliefs, Rongerik was a “bad place.” The island had once been inhabited by the evil spirit, Libokra, who poisoned fish and vegetation and turned the water brackish. However, despite their fears, the Bikini people agreed to Rongerik because it was uninhabited and not under the control of another “alap”.

In early March 1946, the Bikini People packed their personal belongings and dismantled their homes in preparation for relocation. They visited the burials of their ancestors and decorated their graves with flowers and palm fronds.



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Photograph by Carl Mydans, Leaving Bikini, 3/1946

On March 7, weeping and singing farewells, 167 Bikini people were transported to Rongerik. The island was one sixth the size of Bikini and 125 miles away.  

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Photography by Carl Mydans, Leaving Bikini, 3/1946

             The Bikini people were given sufficient United States government provisions to last a few weeks. However, the resources on Rongerik had been greatly exaggerated to them. As the rations ran out, and they turned to the island’s resources for food, it became obvious that the resources on Rongerik were inadequate to support them.

            After they had lived on Rongerik for two months, the seriousness of their situation became evident, and chief Juda began the first of his many requests to return his people to Bikini.  Despite Juda’s reports of the desperate conditions under which his people lived, the welfare of the 167 Bikini people on Rongerik Island was of minor significance to others.

The Bikini People Experience Multiple Relocations

            Only after two years had passed and it was indisputable that the Rongerik settlement had failed, did the Trust Territory administration begin a thorough investigation of the status of the Bikini Islanders on Rongerik.

            The University of Hawaii anthropologist, Leonard Mason, was selected to conduct the investigation. When Mason arrived at Rongerik January 31, 1948, he discovered that the Bikini people were eating a gruel of flour and water, all resources from the store were depleted, the crops were failing and fish were scarce. The only drinkable water was rainwater doled out to each family one bucket per day. Mason also learned that in May 1947 a fire destroyed one fifth of the island, further reducing the food supply. He concluded the Bikini people were in “an extreme state of impoverishment” and recommended immediate relocation.

Mason, Leonard, 00.0027-K “Group of ex-Bikinians in front of Rongerik house.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections
Mason, Leonard, 00.0026-K “Shot of the Rongerik village street.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections
Mason, Leonard, 00.0031-K “Juda.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections

Kwajalein, Kili and Continued Relocations

            The Bikini people were relocated from Rongerik on March 14, 1948 to Kwajalein Atoll where they lived in a tent camp beside the airstrip used by the American military.

Mason, Leonard, 00.0049-K “Bikinians at Kwaj. Camp.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections
Mason, Leonard, 00.0039-K “Bikinians at Kwaj. Camp.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections
Mason, Leonard, 00.0038-K “Bikinians at Kwaj. Camp.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections

After eight months in temporary housing on Kwajalein, they were relocated again, this time to Kili, an uninhabited island in the Southern Marshall Islands. Kili, 200 acres in size, lacked a lagoon and a sheltered fishing area. Seas were rough with waves 10 to 20 feet high. In bad weather the Bikini people could not fish, and the Trust Territory ships that brought food supplies could not unload.

Kiste, Robert, 00.0360-K “Xmas Day activities are completed.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections
Kiste, Robert, 00.0128-K “Thatching of Juda’s house. Finished thatch job at upper left.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digital Image Collections
Kiste, Robert, “Takio/Iaeko wedding celebration. Kilians in background singing.,” Courtesy, University of Hawaii UHM Library Digita Image Collections,

            Despite their difficulties, the Bikini people obtained some success in growing crops on Kili and achieved partial revitalization of their community. In the long run, however, the crops they grew and the fish they caught were insufficient to sustain them. In 1957 and 1958, typhoons hit Kili with force and destroyed most of the crops they had planted. Eventually, the Bikini people became dependent on United States canned food for their survival.

The images of Rongerik and Kwajalein were made by Anthropologist Leonard Mason in 1948. Images of Kili are by Anthropologist Robert Kiste in 1963. Kiste was a student of Leonard Mason at the University of Hawaii. The original images were donated to the University of Hawaii Photo Archives for inclusion in the Pacific Collection of the Manoa Library in 2005. The original 35 mm colors slides were then digitized and auto corrected for color and exposure improvement. I had the images above further photoshop corrected by enhancing resolution, improving color and lightening under exposed images to improve readability. I accessed the images from the collection May 26, 2021. To view the images in the context of the Pacific Collection and to read the comments of Anthropologists Mason and Kiste, please click on the link to the collection.

https://digital.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/

Despite the destruction caused by the detonations of Able and Baker, the United States continued its nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands including the detonation of 23 nuclear weapons on Bikini Atoll.  March 1, 1954, the United States exploded the hydrogen bomb, Bravo, in the northwest corner of Bikini Atoll. Bravo was the largest nuclear bomb ever detonated, 1000 times more powerful than the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Three islands were pulverized by the explosion and no longer exist. Radioactive debris rose more than 20 miles into the air and fallout spread over much of the Marshall Islands.

Attempted Resettlement of Bikini

            Throughout the years and their many relocations, the Bikini people maintained a strong attachment to their homeland. They continued to believe that someday they would be able to return to their island as they had been promised by the United States. Eventually, officials in Washington, D.C. agreed to investigate the feasibility of returning the Bikini people to their island.

            A study by The Atomic Energy Commission concluded, “The exposures of radiation that would result from the repatriation of the Bikini people do not offer a significant threat to their health and safety.” June 1968, President Lynden B. Johnson announced that the 540 Bikini people living on Kili would be able to return to their island.

            However, at the time of President Johnson’s statement, Bikini was not the island the people remembered. Debris and equipment from the nuclear tests cluttered the land. Three islands in the atoll had been vaporized by the Bravo detonation. Most coconut palms had been destroyed and the island was covered with scrub vegetation.

            Nevertheless, an immense effort to restore Bikini for habitation began in 1969. After the cleanup and replanting phase was completed, the Atomic Energy Commission erroneously stated, “There’s virtually no radiation left, and we can find no discernible effect on either plant or animal life.”

High Levels of Radioactivity Discovered on Bikini

            During the second phase of rehabilitation, however, investigators discovered that coconut crab shells contained high levels of radioactivity. This information was alarming since three extended families had already moved into the cement structures on Bikini that had been created for them.

            In 1975 during routine monitoring, radioactivity levels were again discovered to be high, and the United States Department of Interior stated, ”Bikini appears to be hotter or questionable as to safety.” Additional studies indicated water from the wells was too contaminated to drink and the local foods such as pandanus and breadfruit, were too contaminated to eat. Continued investigations confirmed that Bikini was too radioactive to support life, and in September 1978 officials once again evacuated the Bikini Islanders.

The The Nuclear Legacy of the Bikini People

The nuclear legacy of the Bikini people is tragic, They have suffered greatly with regards to loss of homeland and their traditional culture, health issues and starvation at their relocation sites. It is hard to imagine the ongoing disappointment, discouragement and trauma the Bikini Islanders have experienced in the struggle for their basic human rights: to have a home, safety and a reliable way of life. The United States, a supposedly civilized and democratic nation, perpetuated their trauma. The Bikini People have remained nuclear nomads to the present date. 

The Bikini People Today

According to Sosylina Maddison, the National Coordinator for the Bikini Coalition in the United States, approximately 7,000 Bikini Islanders are alive today. The 2020 census indicates the largest island population of Bikini people is 548 on Kili island, the last relocation site of the Bikini people following Operation Crossroads. Many Bikini descendants now live in urban center such as Majuro, the capital of the Marshall Islands. Approximately 1400 Bikinians live in the United States and other countries.

One third of all Marshallese people, including Bikinians, has migrated to the United States in search of health care, work and education. The largest United States population of Marshallese people and Bikini descendants (15,000) resides in Springdale, Arkansas, where many of them work for Tyson Foods in the chicken processing and distribution plants. With its large Marshallese population, Springdale, Arkansas, a city of 80,000, has been referred to as the “New Atoll.”

Click here to see images of the Bikini and Marshalles people

Please listen to the Marshallese poet, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, read her poem “Tell Them” (who we are).

Bikinian Flag

The 23 white stars represent the islands of Bikini Atoll.

The 3 black stars in the upper right corner represent the three islands vaporized by the Castle Bravo detonation on March 1, 1954.

The two black stars in the lower right hand corner represent the islands of Ejit and Kili, where the majority of Bikinians in the Marshall Islands reside today. 

The words MEN OTEMJEJ REJ ILO BEIN ANIJ (MORIBA), which translate as “Everything is in God’s hands,” is the response of Bikinian leader, Juda, to U.S. Commodore Ben Wyatt in 1946 when the Americans asked the Bikinians to give up their islands for the ‘good of mankind.’

Bikinian Anthem (1946), Peformed by Ejit Choir

Written by Lore Kessibuki (1914-1994)

No longer can I stay, it’s true.
No longer can I live in peace and harmony.
No longer can I rest on my sleeping mat and pillow
Because of my island and the life I once knew there.

The thought is overwhelming
Rendering me helpless and in great despair.

My spirit leaves, drifting around and far away
Where it becomes caught in a current of immense power
And only then do I find tranquility.

Credits:  Translation of the Bikinian anthem and the description of the flag from Jack Niedenthal, For the Good of Mankind;   the Bikinian Anthem recorded at Nuclear Victims and Survivors Day, Ejit, courtesy of Jessica A. Schwartz. Source: Official Website of the Kili/Bikini/Ejit Local Government

Nuclear Remembrance Day, 2020

I was introduced to and become acquainted with the Marshallese and Bikini people during two visits to Springdale, Arkansas. Nuclear Remembrance Day February 28-March 1, 2020 and July 27-August 1, 2021 when I participated in the Atoll Stroll Festivities.

During these events, The Bikini and Marshallese people shared their traditional songs, dances, and foods and welcomed all of us whom attended their activities. Although it is indisputable that they have experienced nuclear trauma and human rights violations. I found the Bikini and Marshallese people in Springdale to be strong and resilient despite the suffering they have endured. They are proud of their heritage and have succeeded in maintaining their traditions in the United States to an impressive degree.

Marshallese Dancer, Nuclear Remembrance Day, Springdale, Arkansas
Marshallese Dancers, Nuclear Remembrance Day, Springdale, Arkansas
Marshallese Young Women, Nuclear Remembrance Day, Springdale, Arkansas
Melisa Laelan, Director, Arkansas Coalition for the Marshall Islands With Her Husband
Marshallese Couple, Nuclear Remembrance Day, Springdale, Arkansas
Marshallese Young People Gather in the Kitchen, Nuclear Remembrance Day, Springdale, Arkansas

Atoll Stroll Festivities, 2021

I returned to Springdale for the Atoll Stroll festivities July 27-August 1, 2021 and was invited to participate in the festivities by joining Sosylina Maddison and other Bikini descendants in the Bikini booth. It was a privilege to be able to talk with strollers about the Bikini Project and to answer their questions. The images below were taken during the Atoll Stroll.

The United States governed Bikini and the Marshall Islands as a United Nations Strategic Trust Territory from 1947 until 1986 when an independent Republic of the Marshall Islands was established. As the administrator of the Trust Territory, the United States’s responsibility was to “promote the economic advancement and self-sufficiency of the inhabitants”, and to this end to “…protect the inhabitants against the loss of their lands and resources…”

The United States blatantly and intentionally failed its mission. After the explosion of Baker in 1946, the United States detonated an additional 21 nuclear weapons on Bikini Atoll.

When the Bikini people were removed from their island a second time in 1978, The United States government awarded them a small compensation for their hardships. The initial fund was approximately 6 million dollars. The Bikinians generally received $40,000 a month distributed through the Kili/Bikini/Ejit local Governing Council to all individuals with legitimate rights on Bikini Atoll.

Since 1982 and throughout the years the United States renewed or established other trust funds for the Bikini people. The Bikinians also filed suits against the United States for the damages they incurred from nuclear testing and violation of their fifth amendment rights under the United States constitution. This amendment states the United States shall not deprive a person of life, liberty or property without due process of law.

The Compact of Free Association

In 1986 the Compact of Free Association was approved by the United States Congress as an extension of the United Nations Territorial Trusteeship. The agreement created The Nuclear Claims Tribunal to handle litigations. The Tribunal awarded the Bikini People $563,315,500 in funds that did to exist. However, since the agreement halted all previous Marshallese suits against the United States, the onus of legal pursuit was placed upon the Bikini people.

The Compact of Free Association also accorded the United states the right to a continued military presence on the Marshall Islands. In return, the Marshall Islanders were granted non-immigrant status. With this status, they received the right to live and work in the United states without a visa or work permit. The agreement, however, failed to provide an avenue to citizenship, and the Marshallese people have been denied benefits such as health insurance. In December 2020 they became eligible for medicaid.

In 2017 the remaining Bikini trust was valued at $59 million. Until that time, the United States Department of the Interior had veto power over how much money the Kili/Bikini/Ejit Governing Council could withdraw. In November 2017 the Department of the Interior relinquished the veto right, and the K/B/E Governing Council now has complete decision making rights over the funds.

Sosylina Maddison, Atoll Stroll, Springdale Arkansas
Marshallese Woman Displays Traditional Crafts, Atoll Stroll, Springdale, Arkansas
A Welcoming Marshallese Woman, Atoll Stroll, Springdale, Arkansas
A Loving Marshallese Child, Atoll Stroll, Springdale, Arkansas
Traditional Dance, Atoll Stroll, Springdale, Arkansas
Preparing For the Dance, Atoll Stroll, Springdale, Arkansas

Around Town, Springdale, Arkansas 2021

Additional Images of Bikini and Marshallese People at church, pool hall, store and park.

Relaxing and Relating in the Park, Springdale, Arkansas
Mother and Son, Springdale, Arkansas
Marshallese Church and Pastor, Springdale, Arkansas
Marshallese Store, Traditional Dress and Flower Crowns, Springdale, Arkansas
At the Pool Hall, Springdale, Arkansas
At the Pool Hall, Springdale, Arkansas

Bikini Survivors of Operation Crossroads

When I began the Bikini Project in 2018, my research indicated twenty-five Bikinians who were alive at the time of Operation Crossroads were still alive. At the time I received the CENTER Launch Grant, June 2021, Sosylina Maddison indicated only eleven survivors were alive. When I visited Springdale in July 2021, she revealed that two more survivors had died. The last Bikini survivors in Springdale died a few years ago. At the present time, two survivors live in Oregon and the remainder (7) live in the Marshall Islands on the Island of Kili. I would like to meet the survivors of Operation Crossroads and record their stories. However, due to the pandemic, the Marshall Islands is closed to travelers. Nevertheless, the goal is clear: to hear the stories and document the experiences of the Bikini survivors. In the meantime, I have refocused my attention on the descendants of the survivors.

Five Bikini Descendants Describe The Bikini Experience

While I was in Springdale for the Atoll Stroll festivities July 2021, I interviewed and photographed five Bikini descendants of the Operation Crossroads survivors. While the images of the events I attended portray the resilience of the Bikini and Marshallese people, I believe the interviews delve deeper into what it means to be Bikinian. Their stories and memories are rich with detail and emotion about their families’ experiences. They convey deeper sense of whaat the nuclear legacy has meant to them. I am grateful for their kindness and help with my project. Please see their images below and click on the link to their interviews. Several themes were discussed by all five of the descendants, and, in addition to their own words, I have summarized these themes below.

Sosylina Maddison, National Coordinator for the Bikini Coalition
Bikini Descendent
Lumen Benjamin and His Wife
His Grandfather, Josaiah Kerong, was the First Pastor of the Bikini Protestant Church.
His mother was a Bikini survivor and an adolescent during Operation Crossroads.
Mr. Benjamin is the Executive Councilman for the Kili/Bikini/Ejit Local Government
Helsa Lewis, Oldest Living Bikinian in Springdale, Arkansas
Ketran Joash, Bikini Descendant Seeking Medicaid Approval for Medical Problems
Garrick Kelen, Vice Consul, Republic of the Marshall Islands
Great Grandmother was a Bikini Survivor

Loss of Homeland

The Bikini descendants expressed great sadness and, at times, anger regarding the loss of their homeland. Their forefathers, they said, were asked to leave Bikini “For the good of mankind” so that the United States could conduct nuclear testing on their land. Believing “All was in the hands of God,” and that they could return to Bikini after the testing was completed, they agreed. They moved their families and all their belongings to Rongerik, an island with insufficient resources to support them. At Rongerik, they were forgotten, suffering hardships and starvation for two years. Seventy-five years later, the Bikini people are still nomads moving from island to island in hopes of finding a permanent home. Bikini remains unsafe for habitation and, most likely, will never be habitable again since radiation has contaminated the land, food and water. The Bikini descendants want a permanent home where they can live together, a place where they can obtain health care, support for their basic needs and quality of life.

Identification as Bikinian

When I asked the Bikini descendants whether they felt an identification as Bikinian despite all the changes and relocations in the last 75 years, each gave a strong positive response. They are proud to be Bikinian, the descendants of strong and resilient people who were great boat builders and navigators. They also believe there is Bikini way of doing things which is distinct from the cultural traditions of the other islanders. In addition, their Bikini identity has been amplified by stories and memories passed down by their elders.

Faith

I wondered how the Bikini people were able to survive the consequences of their nuclear trauma. The descendants said their faith gave them strength and the perseverance to look towards the future. “It is all in God’s hands” were Juda’s words in 1946. These words continue to provide solace to Juda’s descendants. As one descendant remarked, when his forefathers left Bikini, they dismantled the church and carried it with them to Rongerik and to each subsequent relocation. The original church remains on Kili, the site of their last relocation.

Health Care

One descendant discussed her medical needs and the difficulty in obtaining adequate medical care in the Marshall Islands. She reported that four years ago she developed a severe headache and was transported from Kili to the hospital in Majuro. She was hospitalized for two months receiving only infusions, medication and bed rest. Not until she lost her vision and became paralyzed was she transported to the Philippines for surgery. She is now living in Springdale and struggles to maneuver the medicaid protocol in order to receive approval for further treatment of her condition.

The Marshallese people have the highest rate of diabetes in the world, 25-40%. In comparison, the United States rate of diabetes is 8%. Dr. Sheldon Rilkon, one of only two Marshallese doctors in the United States, believes many health problems are directly related to the impacts to their traditional culture. 

In their relocations to Rogerik, Kwajalein and Kili, the Bikinians found scant resources and experienced an inability to continue their traditional way of life. Gradually they became dependent on imported canned food such as Spam and other foods from the US Department of Agriculture. To a large extent, as a result of changes in their diet and way of life, many Marshallese people have developed other health problems such as heart disease and hypertension and diabetes. These underlying health problem created a greater risk factor for Covid 19. According to Mr. Alik, 53 Marshallese individuals died from the Corona Virus in Arkansas during the pandemic.

In addition, radiation exposure, especially from Bravo in 1954, is responsible for exceedingly high rates of thyroid and other types of cancer, Graves Disease, autoimmune illness and clusters of rare conditions. Despite the need for a cancer treatment center to deal with the high rates of cancer among Marshallese People, none exists in the Marshall Islands. Women experience a higher than normal rate of miscarriage, and the incidence of cervical cancer is the highest in the world (NNC p. 30). Many children have been born with severe abnormalities. DNA studies indicate that the intergenerational effects from radiation can persist for several generations. 

Climate Change

The Marshall Islands is at risk to disappear as sea levels rise. Kili, the island on which most Bikini people live, is six feet above sea level. The island is small only 200 acres in size, approximately one mile long by one half mile wide. The descendants described the “king tides” that wash over Kili during storms and cause damage to their homes and land. One descendant made an analogy between the irresponsibility of the global community with regards to climate change and the irresponsibility of the Unites States towards the welfare of the Bikini and Marshallese people. Just as the United States relinquishes responsibility for the damage it has done to the Marshall Islands, the world’s most powerful nations are relinquishing their responsibility for damage to the environment. The descendants state that unless the global community takes responsibility for the environment, climate change will necessitate the removal of the Bikini people from Kili and other Islands in the Marshall Islands as well.

Part 4: Nuclear Justice

The National Nuclear Commission of the Marshall Islands has developed a strategy for obtaining nuclear justice defined by five pillars. They advocate for compensation for their losses, quality health care, a toxic free environment, empowerment to develop a national capacity independent of the United States and education and awareness regarding their nuclear legacy. The strategy is specific and contains goals, objectives and actions. In summary, the strategy proclaims:

“We know we will obtain nuclear justice when the health of the Marshallese people and our islands is restored, when displaced communities are returned to or compensated for their homelands, when the full range of damages and injuries stemming from the program is acknowledged and compensated by the U.S. Government, when the record of adverse impacts from nuclear weapons testing is preserved for the benefit of humankind, and when every Marshallese citizen understands the activities that took place in our islands and their aftermath and feels empowered to use their voice to advocate for the needs of their communities.” (NNC: FY2020-2023 p.4)

Please see: National Nuclear Commission: Nuclear Justice for the Marshall Islands a Strategy for Coordinated Action, FY 2020 to FY 2023.

The Bikini Project Can Help

With regards to the five pillars of nuclear justice identified as goals in the Marshallese Strategy for Nuclear Justice, I believe the Bikini Project makes a contribution to “education and awareness” by drawing attention to the catastrophic consequences of nuclear weapons. 

The Bikini Project was awarded the 2021 Project Launch Grant by CENTER in Santa Fe, New Mexico. CENTER, a not for profit organization, supports photography projects that pursue social and environmental goals. The grant offers many opportunities to make others aware of and educated about the nuclear history of Bikini and the Marshall Islands. It is also an opportunity to draw attention to the relevancy of the Bikini and Marshallese story for the global community.

On January 22, 2021, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons entered force without the signatures of the United States, Russia or the seven other nations possessing nuclear weapons. Despite the absence of their signatures, a sense of urgency regarding nuclear disarmament is evident suggesting the avoidance of nuclear war by accident or intent is of prime importance in the world today. The Bikini Project is poised to recognize and take advantage of any opportunity to increase awareness and education about the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons. 

Part 5: Acknowledgements

References

Barker, Holly M. 2004. Bravo for the Marshallese: Regaining Control in a Post-Nuclear, Post Colonial World. Thompson and Wadsworth.

Bradley, David. 1948. No Place to Hide. Little Brown and Company, Boston.

Johnson, Giff. 2013. Don’t Ever Whisper. Darlene Keju, Pacific Health Pioneer.

Kiste, Robert C. 1974. The Bikinians: A Study in Forced Migration. Cummings Publishing Company.

Mason, Leonard. 1948. Rongerik Report: Summary Findings and Recommendations.
Office of the High Commissioner of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.

National Nuclear Commission of the Marshall Islands. FY 2020-FY2023. Nuclear Justice for the Marshall Islands, A Strategy for Coordinated Action.

Niedenthal, Jack. 2001. For the Good of Mankind, A History of the People of Bikini and Their Islands. Bravo Publishers Majuro, Marshall Islands.

Personal Communications

Alik, Eldon. Consul General, Republic of the Marshall Island, Springdale, Arkansas.

Burleson, Derek. Public Relations, Tyson Foods, Springdale, Arkansas.

Grahlfs, Ph.D., F. Lincoln. Past Vice Commander, National Association of Atomic Veterans, Surviving Operation Crossroads participant.

Griego, Paul. New Mexico State Commander, National Association of Atomic Veterans.

Maddison, Sosylina. Coordinator, Bikini Coalition, Springdale, Arkansas.

Laelan, Melisa. Director, Arkansas Coalition of Marshallese, Springdale, Arkansas.

Riklon, Sheldon. Associate Professor UAMS, Office of Community Health and Research, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine.

Recognition

In Recognition of the Kind and Trusting Bikini People

Who made a well intended sacrifice of their Homeland

“For the Good of Mankind”

Acknowledgments

I would like to acknowledge my younger sister, Gene (Jean) Whitmore Marsh. She was 18 months old when Will left for Bikini and 14 years old when he died. Her life, as well as mine, was impacted by Will’s decision to participate in Operation Crossroads. Gene became an advanced practice nurse and eventually obtained a Ph.D. in clinical nursing research. Her contribution to public health, the care of vulnerable populations, teaching, conducting research, and her work at the university level in Kenya are commendable. Gene is an Associate Professor Emerita at the University of Colorado College of Nursing. She relates the course of her professional life to the impact of Will’s Operation Crossroads experiences and his probable illness and subsequent death from radiation exposure. Will’s Bikini memorabilia were stored in Gene’s basement. They belong to her as much as to me. Gene is writing a memoir about her nursing experiences in Kenya. 

Thank you West Cooper of West Design Tech. Without West’s support and technical expertise, I would not have been able to share the Bikini images, essays, videos and the many links on my website with you. West “tech savvy”, and he is an amazingly patient teacher. No matter what I have asked West to do, he has found a way to do it. He has “hung in there” with me, providing the explanations I needed to feel confident the website would successfully convey my thoughts and ideas to you, my viewers.

I am very grateful to CENTER for awarding the Bikini Project the 2021 Project Launch Grant. CENTER is a Not-For-Profit organization that supports photographers and socially and environmentally engaged lens based projects. The grant provides financial support and many professional development opportunities. In the future, I would like to visit the Marshall Islands and to meet the survivors and descendants of Operation Crossroads who live there today. The Launch Grant will help to cover the expense of travel, logistics and translation. The grant also offers many opportunities to share my work, and the funding will help to facilitate these opportunities when they arise.

Sosylina Maddison, the Coordinator for the Bikini Coalition, has arranged interviews with the Bikini descendants and offered her office as a place to conduct the interviews and make photographs. She also invited me to participate in the Atoll Stroll at the Bikini booth. She provided logistical support while I was in Springdale, Arkansas and has been a good friend. I also want to thank Eldon Alik, Consul General for the Republic of the Marshall Island, for his support and interest in the Bikini Project. Melisa Laelan, Director, Arkansas Coalition of Marshallese, has also offered encouragement and interest in the Bikini Project.

The Marshallese and especially the Bikini people are known for their kindness and hospitality. I consider it a privilege to have met these people. I am thankful for their willingness to share their stories and the stories of their families.

Part 5: Contact

The Bikini Project is a project of Jane Whitmore Photography and the Enduring Traditions Project. As the Bikini Project has grown and taken new form, it warrants an independent website separate from Jane Whitmore Photography. However, if you wish to view more images of Operation Crossroads and the Bikini people, please click on the link, JaneWhitmorePhotography.com and view the images in the Bikini gallery where the complete portfolio can be seen. You may also view other projects by Jane Whitmore Photography here

Jane Whitmore, Psy.D. is a clinical psychologist and former anthropologist. She has an enduring interest in human rights, respect for diversity and compassion for the human condition. She can be contacted at jane@thebikiniproject.org or leave a message for Jane below.