

The bill to add the Funter Bay cemetery to the marine park almost became a law last year.Įdelen, who traveled to Juneau during the last legislative session with a delegation of elders from the Pribilofs, found most lawmakers were receptive. This land will be protected, and we don’t have to worry about them.” ‘We didn’t have a lot of persuading to do’ “What we wanted was to know that they were going to be protected, they’re going to be safe. “Our traditions - once somebody is laid to rest, they’re laid to rest,” Edelen said. Edelen said the bill would also give people in the Pribilofs peace of mind that their loved ones won’t be disturbed. She’s acted as a liaison between Pribilof elders and people in Southeast Alaska working to preserve the history of the internment. That would mean the land couldn’t be sold or developed, and people would always be able to care for the cemetery so it wouldn’t gradually vanish in the forest.īut the bill serves a more immediate need. Preserving that history is part of the impetus behind a bill that would add about 250 acres of state land, including the cemetery, to Funter Bay State Marine Park. “Who are these people? What happened, and why are they here?” “Why is there a cemetery in the middle of the forest out in Funter Bay?” Stepetin imagined them asking. When he found the cemetery, he realized that anyone who stumbled on it would have no idea what they were seeing. About 10% of them died - mostly young children and the elderly - before they were allowed to return home in 1944. government forcibly removed them from the treeless Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea and took them to the Southeast rainforest about 1,300 miles away - with only one bag apiece and no hunting or fishing gear.Īt Funter Bay they were left to fend for themselves, living in tents and the remains of an old mine and cannery, without clean water or medicine. The cemetery holds the graves of 30 to 40 Unangax̂ people who died at Funter Bay during World War II. And we’re asking folks, ‘Hey, do you know where this is - where the Aleuts were kept?’ And many people didn’t even know. “We looked all over inside of Funter Bay,” Stepetin said.
FUNTER 4X4X4 CENA HOW TO
The first time Martin Stepetin went to the Unangax̂ cemetery at Funter Bay, he didn’t know how to find it. (Courtesy of the Juneau-Douglas City Museum)

Transport dimensions: see above.A recent photo of the Unangax̂ cemetery at Funter Bay. Tyres: ROUGH TERRAIN TYRES (15.5/80–24) – all around approx. 2.290 mm, LIFTING FORCE: 3.000 kg, LIFTING HEIGHT: 10.00 m, FORKS (forklength: 1.200 mm / width admission: 1.060 mm) - ADDITIONAL HYDRAULIC, QUICK CHANGER, 4-cylinder PERKINS diesel-engine (type: 2160/2200 – 83.64 PS / 61.50 kW – 2.200 rpm), 4-WHEEL-DRIVE (4WD) and ALL-WHEEL-STEERING SYSTEM (4x4x4) – CRAB STEERING (dogway), hydraulic supports (2x), OVERLOAD PROTECTION SYSTEM, big driverhouse, CPB, comfortseat, ROPS / FOPS, follower coupling, road lightings, WARNING LIGHT, back view mirrors (2x), windshield wipers (2x), heating / ventialtion.
FUNTER 4X4X4 CENA SERIES
* FINANZIERUNG MÖGLICH / TRANSPORT GÜNSTIG (WELTWEIT) / BEI EXPORT IST NUR DER NETTO-PREIS ZU BEZAHLEN (!) * © pb - Rough terrain telescopic forklift MANITOU, type: MT 1030 S Series 3-E2 4x4x4, first use: 2009, HEIGHT ONLY: approx. Bereifung: GELÄNDEREIFEN (15.5/ 80–24) – rundum ca. 2.290 mm, HUBKRAFT: 3.000 kg, HUBHÖHE: 10.00 m, LANGE LADEGABELN (Gabellänge: 1.200 mm / Breite Aufnahme: 1.060 mm) - ZUSATZHYDRAULIK, SCHNELLWECHSLER, 4-Zylinder PERKINS Diesel-Motor (Typ: 2160/2200 – 83.64 PS / 61.50 kW bei 2.200 U/min), ALLRAD und ALLRADLENKUNG (4x4x4) - HUNDEGANG, hydraulische Abstützungen (2x), ÜBERLASTWARNEINRICHTUNG, großes Führerhaus, CPB, Komfortsitz, ROPS / FOPS, Anhängerkupplung, Verkehrsbeleuchtung, WARNLEUCHTE, Außenspiegel (2x), Scheibenwischer (2x), Heizung / Lüftung. Gelände - Teleskoparmstapler MANITOU, Typ: MT 1030 S Serie 3-E2 4x4x4, Ersteinsatz: 2009, BAUHÖHE NUR: ca.
