In ALASKA NATIVE RESILIENCE: Voices from World War II, Holly Miowak Guise (Iñupiaq) characterizes the response of Indigenous communities to the World War II incursion of the United States military into Alaskan Natives’ rightful homelands, detailing non-violent resistance and efforts toward equilibrium restoration.
Guise writes, “This book is not just about World War II Alaska; it is about the expansion of US empire and the ways that Alaska Native nations refused erasure by multiple competing settler colonial empires. The US Congress’s purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867 remains a folly,” she states, “because the empires never consulted with the Native nations.”
Although I’d studied materials focused on the lives of Japanese Americans interned after Executive Order 9066, I was unfamiliar with the experiences of the more than eight hundred eighty Unangax̂ people who, in June of 1942, their property seized, were forcibly relocated to camps in Southeast Alaska, where little or no attempt was made by the government to provide even the most basic necessities. Among tribal archives and oral histories recorded by the author are accounts of Alaskans who were able to retain their ancestral homes reaching out with gifts of food, shelter and traditional medicines to aid those so unfairly treated.
Pribolobians, also known as Unangax̂, were required to perform their customary work of seal hunting under the direction of the US government. They not only suffered a loss of personal determination, but received merely a fraction of the profit. This may well be perceived as a form of slavery. Even after the war’s cessation, Guise writes, Alaska Native people endured what she calls “Frozen Jim Crow,” referring to systematized, grievous discrimination and denial of rights.
Actions that purportedly began as military exigency due to Imperial Japan’s invasion of the Aleutian Islands, became, the author tells us, colonization. “Segregation, boarding schools and healthcare are all components of settler colonial institutions that seek to dismantle Native communities and sovereignty while emboldening US empire.”
The author emphasizes that during World War II, in determining with whom and to what degree they would cooperate, Native Alaskans were consistently purposeful in limiting erosion of their liberty, livelihood, family and tribal relationships.
An impressive accomplishment. An important book. I highly recommend ALASKA NATIVE RESILIENCE: Voices from World War II.
Author Holly Miowak Guise, Ph.D., History, is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of New Mexico.