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From www.peacecorpsworldwide.org
December 8, 2009
Reviewed by P. David Searles (PC staff 1971–76)[1]
John Durand has written a
fascinating account of a little remembered event at the very beginning
of America’s entry onto the world stage as an imperial power:
the struggle to subdue and annex the Philippines.
These days if anyone
remembers the Spanish American War it is probably with images of Teddy
Roosevelt and his Rough Riders, ‘yellow journalism,’ the island of
Cuba, and the slogan “Remember the Maine, to Hell with Spain.”
But that was Cuba. The war in the Philippines was far bloodier, it
lasted far longer, and it created tensions and legacies that continue to
affect American foreign policy to this day. Durand’s The
Boys: 1st North Dakota Volunteers in the Philippines
recounts the experiences of a group of men, mostly young, who
volunteered to avenge the sinking of the battleship Maine by joining a
quickly assembled regiment of North Dakotans. The author’s command of
the facts is remarkable; and his use of original sources — including
diaries, newspaper accounts, letters home, speeches, and official
reports — add a sense of authenticity that is convincing.
This book will be of
interest to three different groups. The first, and probably the
most intensely interested, will be the families and descendents of all
those North Dakotans who participated in the regiment and whose exploits
were never fully understood, or if they were, have since been forgotten.
The second will be those folks who have an unquenchable thirst for the
strategies and tactics of war, a thirst which will be satisfied by the
astonishingly detailed descriptions of battle plans and their outcomes
contained in the book.
The third group, and this
one includes me, will be made up of those who have often puzzled over
the ‘love/hate’ nature of the Filipino/ American relationship.
During my time in the Philippines, seventy years after the events
described in the book, it was not unusual to encounter very angry
demonstrations in front of the American Embassy or at one of the several
American military bases, hot-tempered outbursts by Filipino politicians,
and angry editorials in the local press. Yet, time and time again
we Americans were treated with such warm and unstinting friendship that
we had to wonder which Filipino was the ‘real’ one.
Durand’s book makes it
abundantly clear that from day one the Philippines had grounds for
charging the US with double-dealing, or worse. The Filipino
patriots who helped the U.S. quickly rout the Spanish forces soon found
themselves the target of American rifles. The American forces
treated the Filipinos with undisguised contempt; stole animals,
foodstuffs, furniture, whole houses and anything not nailed down.
The American leadership even mocked the very idea that Filipinos could
govern themselves, despite the fact that it was independence which
energized the Filipino uprising against the Spanish in 1898 before the
Americans arrived. It would be years later (years not covered in
the book) before William Howard Taft began a more conciliatory approach.
Still later, on July 4, 1946, the United States granted full
independence to the Philippines, accompanied by a round of
self-congratulations for its own magnanimity. On a visit to
Washington in 1995 I noticed that the Philippine Embassy flaunted a huge
banner proclaiming its 97th year of independence in
celebration of Emilio Aguinaldo’s declaration of Philippine
independence on June 12, 1898. So much for July 4, 1946!
It was a bit surprising to
read how the North Dakota volunteers responded to their first encounters
with the Philippines, encounters that happened before any blood had been
spilled. As I read portions of letters home and the author’s
accounts gathered from various sources, I suddenly said to myself “The
Peace Corps volunteers reacted in the same way.” Read pages
153–56 and it will be the 1970s all over again, right down to the
sight-seeing, the souvenir shopping, the tasting and liking of the
exotic local foods, and even the visits to the red light district!
Some things never change.
The book is superbly
researched, well written, and filled with period photos, maps, and
diagrams of the many battles in which the 1st North Dakota
regiment participated. Perhaps the only drawback in the book, at
least for some of us, is the overabundance of detail provided for
individual battles and skirmishes. To make sense of the
information Durand provides the reader will need hours of paper and
pencil work to understand which unit did what to whom, when and where
they did it, and how it all unfolded.
[1]
Reviewer P. David Searles
served three years as the Country Director for the Peace Corps in
the Philippines from 1971 to 1974, and then spent two years at Peace
Corps headquarters as Regional Director for NANEAP and as Deputy
Director of the agency (1974-76). Following the end of
his business career in 1990, David earned a Ph. D. from the
University of Kentucky (1993), and published two books: A College
for Appalachia (1995) and The Peace Corps Experience
(1997), both published by The University Press of Kentucky.
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