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A Letter From Pitcairn Island
(with cut)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
Chris Bergeron waited six months for a reply to a letter, but when it came it
was well worth the wait. He is one of the few Americans to get a personal
response from the pastor of Pitcairn Island.
Pitcairn is an island lost in the South Pacific, where the descendants from
the Bounty, made famous by Mutiny on the Bounty , can still be found.
Chris had become fascinated with life on this isolated island in the South
Pacific as soon as he learned about it. He wondered what teenagers did on an
island with only 60 residents (especially since only ten residents were
children). He wanted to know what the people looked like, what they ate, where
they lived. He wondered how it felt to only get mail delivery three times a
year (when the ship comes in), and if they had telephones.
Since so many students (from around the world) write to Pitcairn Island, the
people living there simply cannot reply to all the letters personally. Most
people are sent the Island Newsletter which gives Island news and gossip.
But Pastor John Chan of Pitcairn saw something in Chris's letter that made him
want to respond, and he did with a long, humorous personal letter for Chris.
Chris was so pleased when he got the letter, he read all six pages out loud
without catching his breath, to Corrine Cox, special education teacher.
The islanders, most of whom are "great great great grandchildren of white
English sailors and their Polynesian wives" live quiet farming lives. They
live off sweet potatoes, bananas, coconuts, fish, and bread.
Chris thought it was neat that instead of cars, everybody drove "quads" a four
wheel all terrain vehicle across the two mile long, one mile wide island.
Dr Reed, looking over the descriptions in the letter from Pitcairn said "you
know, I bet this is something a lot of people dream of, living on an isolated
island, getting mail three times a year."
Chris pointed out the part in the letter where Pastor Chan shared a little
local gossip: one young man made a call to England for half-an-hour and it
cost him over $100. Good news for people who avoid tele-marketers.
Chris also pointed out a peculiarity with the local telephone system. The
local phone is just one party line, so anyone can pick up the phone and listen
in on other people's calls, which Chris thought would be a distinct
disadvantage for teenagers. Even Pastor Chan admitted that people hardly ever
use the local phone for this reason.
Mrs Cox is thrilled by the response from Pitcairn and how it has continued to
spark Chris's growing interest in reading. She said when school started last
fall, Chris was not interested in reading. But she got him started on a
wilderness adventure novel, The Hatchet , by Gary Paulsen, and all of this has
developed out of ideas he got from the novel. In the novel, the main
character, Brian, had to hide out in a cave. Chris drew the cave, and the
following week Mrs Cox found an article in Discover Magazine with a cave
picture very similar to Chris's cave picture, (November 1997 "Paradise Lost").
The article was on Pitcairn Island.
From there, there was no holding Chris back. He researched Pitcairn on
Encarta. He obtained a contact name and address in Pitcairn from someone he
met who happened to get the Pitcairn Newsletter. When he wrote to Pitcairn, he
knew it would be six months before the mail would get there and be picked up
again, but for Chris, it was well worth the wait.
