Japanese visitors, one of the biggest sources of tourism revenues here, have shied away from Hawaii after the Sept. 11 terror attacks in New York and Washington. As of Sept. 24, Japanese arrivals were down 59 percent compared to the same period last year, according to The Honolulu Advertiser. The Japanese, it seems, were spooked by US President George W. Bushs reference to Pearl Harbor after the Sept. 11 attacks. The Advertiser reported that with the sharp downturn in tourist arrivals, Honolulu has become one of the four US cities to suffer the worst economically in the wake of the attacks. The three others are Las Vegas, Orlando and Fort Worth in Bushs home state. The downturn is expected to reduce this citys Gross Municipal Product by around $500 million by the second quarter of 2002, the newspaper reported.
This week the last US airport to remain closed in the aftermath of the attacks reopened. But I guess everyone is still keeping an eye out for carry-on knives and box cutters. There are canine bomb sniffers at the airport here. For a while security was so tight at the naval base at Pearl Harbor that even soldiers who were off duty were barred from the base, but security has since relaxed.
"We cant let terrorists run our lives," Charles Morrison told me. Morrison is president of the East-West Center. He admitted that East-West briefly considered canceling our Fall 2001 Jefferson Fellowship. But they decided that unless the fellows themselves wanted the program scrapped, it would push through as scheduled, with a special change in the itinerary: a visit to New York instead of Houston, Texas.
Vietnamese-American Thanh-Lo Sananikone, who lived in Manila for several years, said her daughter is still traumatized after losing all but one of her officemates at the World Trade Center. The daughter has refused to return to her Manhattan home.
Interestingly, Morrison told me he saw parallels between Americas new war and the Manila governments problem with suicidal Muslim juramentados who tried to drive away Christians (and then Americans) from Mindanao a century ago. Morrison did a study on Sulu when he was a student. How long did it take for the Philippines to deal with this problem? We may no longer see juramentados wrapped head to toe in white cloth after a purifying bath, swinging at their enemies with a kris. But theres still Islamic unrest in Mindanao, with its vicious fundamentalist form embodied by the Abu Sayyaf. Can the cyberspace generation, used to instant gratification, wait that long for results? With so much uncertainty, with lives taken or spared so randomly, its better to just get on with life, Thanh-Lo said. Some of her loved ones have since flown to and from the mainland. She fears for their safety. She prays. But she doesnt stop them from flying. Its their way of fighting back.