Saturday, May 26, 2018
EA Field School 2018 Journal #4
EA Field School Journal #4
What if instead of using all of our time, energy, and resources on developing our personal structures (homes, buildings, shopping centers, etc) and accumulating resources (material goods, entertainment, and excess) and we spent some attention and a little more energy on helping to restore and revive our natural systems on Maui, strengthen community, and build up future leaders in helping to shape this island towards a more sustainable lifestyle.
Ahupuaʻa around Maui start to produce highly nutritional food that we could distribute to our Schools, community neighbourhoods, food banks, and feeding the less fortunate. Members of the community would be able to work alongside each other sharing, communining, and getting to know one another on deeper levels creating a tight mutual network built on authentic relationships. And future generations would come to know and experience this kind of environment creating a solid foundation deep within, building character, and producing healthy individuals with a sense of kuleana for their ʻĀina.
What if wholistic natural food systems were put back into place? What kind of benefits or challenges would that bring? What would it require? Is it possible?
For millions and millions of years the creation of Hawaiʻi was built with certain potentiality in mind. It would have seen the most poetic songwriter, romantic artist, insightful and wise creator(s) orchestrated every mountain top, valley, kahawai, wai puna, makani, all pieces of this island to work and function together in interdependency. Each land feature, territory was given a god to cultivate and teach the coming of kanaka to survive and mālama ʻāina. It was as if each wahi was treated with purity, sacredness, and respect, first by the god guardians that protected it then passed unto the kupuna and aliʻi who held those secrets.
Modern insights in todayʻs world has given another angle of perspective. The geographical landscape and natural catastrophes create the foundation and resources for life. From volcanic explosions to ice glaciers on top of Haleakalā falling and creating rides in the landscape, to massive mudslides and pounding winds building and blowing minerals originated as far as China. The ahupuaʻa such as Kaupō area are filled with exciting geographical stories to be rediscovered. With each geographical realization brings deeper validation of the kupuna who lived on these lands and cultivated them.
With some problems we face today such as importing 80%+ of our food, materialism, excess entertainment, etc. Reestablishing a sustainable ahupuaʻa system within the community, from the community, by the community I believe would alleviate many of the tensions and pressures that come from a european westernized culture. To set up the success of that vision it is necessary for the proper research to be done ma mua. Research experts such as Scott Fischer, Kiana Frank, and Noah Lincon are provided important groundwork for the vision of restoration and malama ʻĀina. As we continue into the vision of a sustainable Hawaiʻi once again models such as Aunty Dona provide a visual for us to experience this dream.
As we continue to look into the past to gain wisdom on how to move forward it would seem the biggest barriers can be the comfortable chains that bind the mind to greed, apathy, and selfish ambition that come from generations after generations of institutionalized brainwashing. It is not only till we are exposed and experience “Aloha ʻĀina” for ourselves that we can truly dive deep into being truly connected to the values of the Lā Hui Hawaiʻi. This experience not only requires deep intellectual understanding but also hard work and dedication, and mostly passionate spirit to truly live out Aloha.
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