Michael Capelle has spent much of his life listening to the stories of older relatives reminisce about life in the Marshall Islands. Capelle has never visited, but his parents have passed down its traditions and history.
鈥淲e sail around the seas, and we don't need navigational tools. That's what sets us apart,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e're the people of the sea.鈥
Landlocked Ohio looks a lot different. Still, a small community of islanders made the long trek from the Marshall Islands 鈥 a country of 42,000 people that sits a couple thousand miles northeast of Papua New Guinea 鈥 to Celina, a small city in western Ohio, where Capelle lives.
Despite the massive distance, Capelle is working to ensure the islands鈥 culture is passed onto the next generation growing up in Ohio.
Passing on the language
Around 30,000 people have emigrated from the Marshall Islands to the U.S. There鈥檚 no official count on their numbers in Celina, but city officials estimate around 1,500 Marshallese people live in the community.
Capelle thinks it鈥檚 double that. The younger generation here is growing, he said, but their knowledge of Marshallese culture is fading.
鈥淲e can't get to the point where our kids, all of them, don鈥檛 know how to speak Marshallese, they don't know our stories, and they don't know our values,鈥 Capelle said.

So, in October, Capelle founded the Ohio Marshallese Youth Center.
On a Saturday night in November, nine teenagers are huddled around a table, scribbling notes and sipping Kool-Aid. Their attention is turned to a Zoom screen where Romaldo Kon Kabua, an instructor from Pacific Island Linguistic Services, is teaching them ways to greet each other in Marshallese: How to say hello, how are you, where they鈥檙e from.
But he鈥檚 not just offering translations. He鈥檚 teaching them about the islands鈥 matriarchal clans, the values of their ancestors, the traditions behind the text.
鈥淥ur greeting was very powerful, intentional, filled with love, filled with beauty,鈥 Kon Kabua said, explaining the meaning behind 鈥渓akwe,鈥 a greeting that literally translates to 鈥測ou are a rainbow.鈥
Protecting a culture
Preserving this culture is difficult but important, said Capelle, especially because many Marshallese people didn鈥檛 choose to come to the U.S. Decades ago, they were displaced.
In the 1940s and 50s, the U.S. used part of the islands to test nuclear weapons. In Operation Crossroads, the United States relocated the tiny population of islanders from Bikini Atoll, a remote corner of the country, and detonated

Those detonations have done lasting harm to the islands. Atomic radiation has damaged its population鈥檚 health, the islands鈥 environment and the Marshallese people as a whole. It contributed to from their native land and subsequent erosion of the language skills that Capelle is seeking to preserve.
The class is just one way that Capelle hopes to help reverse the gradual erasure of their culture.
鈥淲e're thinking about getting to the high schools, getting to the government levels and showcasing our culture because we've had that question like, 鈥楥an you guys come and show us who you guys are?鈥欌 Capelle said.
A place for pride聽
Many of the students in the class said they speak Marshallese at home with their families, but beyond that it鈥檚 hard to find spaces to connect with their culture.
That鈥檚 true for Emiko Ysawa, a 17-year-old who moved to Ohio seven years ago. She joined the new language class so she could understand her 鈥渕anit.鈥 That鈥檚 the Marshallese word for 鈥渃ulture,鈥 but it means more than that. One Marshallese essayist as 鈥渢he core of our being, the spirit in our walk.鈥
鈥As kids in this generation, we don't really follow that expectation, and we just ignore it,鈥 Ysawa said. 鈥淪o for us to spread it out, we need to learn more about it.鈥

Her classmate Kayla Edejer agreed. The 14-year-old said leaving her home country was difficult. She鈥檚 grateful for the opportunity to keep in touch with its culture and ensure she has the language skills to talk with her family that remains there.
鈥淚 love how they reassure us, and they make sure that we feel comfortable in our own space and in this room,鈥 Edejer said.
Capelle founded the Ohio Marshallese Youth organization so his young students can learn to find joy from their heritage, he said. He wants to continue to build places where pride in their home country is not just possible, but applauded.
鈥The Marshall Islands could sink, but I feel like it would always be with me,鈥 Capelle said. 鈥淭he Marshall Islands is not a land, it鈥檚 almost just a people.鈥