The Maureen and Mike Mansfield Center at the University of Montana provides academic courses, seminars, public lectures, conferences and cultural events to promote a better understanding of Asian and U.S.-Asian relations.
 

The Montana-Kumamoto Relationship

A new dialogue on environmental issues launched in 2007 with generous support from the Japan Foundation’s Center for Global Partnership (see accompanying article) will add an academic component to a long standing relationship between Montana and Kumamoto, its sister state in Japan

Mike Mansfield, the former U.S. Ambassador to Japan, visited Kumamoto in August 1979. Kumamoto Prefecture asked Ambassador Mansfield for his suggestion concerning a candidate state in the U.S. with which the prefecture can start a sister state relationship. He recommended his home state, the state of Montana as a good candidate.
Following preliminary discussions about the possibility of starting a sister state relationship, an agreement on sister state relationship was finally signed between Kumamoto Prefecture and State of Montana in Helena, the capital city of Montana, on July 22, 1982.

Mutual visits by official delegates have been a staple of the relationship between Kumamoto Prefecture and the state of Montana since its inception, and fostered a move to create permanent representation . The state of Montana opened a trade office in Kumamoto in 1990 and Kumamoto Prefecture followed by opening a representative office, called Kumamoto Plaza, in Helena in 1992.  Officials are stationed at respective offices in both regions to this day. In 1993 the trade office of Montana in Kumamoto became the Japan Representative Office of Montana. The representative office aims to not only promote close relations between Kumamoto and Montana, but also to serve as a liaison between the rest of the regions of Japan and Montana. Kumamoto Plaza, similarly, promotes and supports grass roots exchange programs between Kumamoto and Montana and seeks to educate the people of both sides about the other.

Significantly, grass roots activities have accompanied the more formal government visits since the early stage of the relationship, and they have been spurred by formal programming organized by the "Montana Club" formed by people of Kumamoto interested in Montana, and the "Japan Friendship Club" formed by people of Montana interested in Japan and Kumamoto.  High school student exchange programs have been going on for many years, and high school instructors from Kumamoto have also visited Montana for language and instructional training for quite a long time.  In recent years, two way traffic has been stimulated by involvement by private nonprofit and community service entities in Montana, including Rotary International District 5390, the Missoula Children's Theater, the Helena Youth Choir, the Dillon Fiddlers, and the Helena Babe Ruth Baseball program, all of which have sent delegations to Kumamoto and, in return, welcomed Kumamoto delegations to Montana. Most recently two high school marching bands from Kumamoto toured Montana, and a quartet from the University of Montana performed in Kumamoto 

A healthy feature of the exchange has been the growth of a healthy competition between Missoula and Helena since the establishment of the Kumamoto Japan Friendship Club was created in Missoula in 1994. Missoula local high schools have sent regular delegations of "Aso Wings" - Missoula students flying to Kumamoto's landmark Mount Aso volcano - and received groups of "Rocky Wings" in return every other year. Each year, about 25 to 30 High School students come to Missoula for a week, where they stay with host families and establishing long-lasting relationships, as well as cultural understanding. For all other exchanges as well, citizens in Montana and Kumamoto have opened their homes to visitors, housed students, and otherwise demonstrated their friendship and generosity to people from their sister state.

The citizens of Kumamoto, especially those of the Montana Club, have also made extraordinary contributions to the sister state relationship by raising money for Montana forest fire relief, by helping commission a statue of Mike Mansfield for the Capitol in Helena, and by facilitating the decoration of Kumamoto city buses with images by Montana artist Monte Dolack.

On the official level the Missoula Chamber of Commerce traveled to Japan in April of 2004 on a trade delegation headed by then Governor Judy Martz to promote trade between the two countries. The group, consisting of fifteen individuals, first traveled to Kumamoto, where they were greeted with a very positive reception. The Montanan’s sponsored a reception for Montana travel, complete with rope tricks, fly-fishing demonstrations, and cowboy hats, while they received a briefing on the Montana-Japan Trade Office about the relationship of the two areas and operations of the respective organizations. Others had live radio interviews on tourism promotion. The group also met with Governor Shiotani on the sister relationship. The main event was the Montana Club reception the first evening. The Montana Club is a group of Montana supporters (Japanese and American) that meets periodically. This time, it was a full-blown affair, with 130+ in attendance, including Governor Shiotani and the Mayor of Kumamoto. It was a great presentation, including cultural offerings and awards for the best Kumamoto-Montana relationship supporters.
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