Showing posts with label hawaii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hawaii. Show all posts

Thursday, April 11, 2019

No ka hale pule a'u: A brief History:


"Coastlands, listen to Me in silence, And let the peoples gain new strength; Let them come forward, then let them speak; Let us come together for judgment.”  -Isaiah 41:1
There was never a time when the Kingdom of Hawaii has ever given up its rights as a sovereign state nation.  

During the reign of the Kamehameha family structures were set in place to assure the sovereignty of Hawaii.  

Hawaii had a government, declared independence, been recognized, and was under the league of Nations.

In 1893 the Republic of Hawaii (mostly wealthy sugar planters, and businessmen) overthrew the Kingdom of Hawaii by force of US military.  

The Republic of Hawaii provides Newlands Resolution 1898 “joint resolution” to U.S. but is not a treaty.  It was made a port for the Spanish American war.

No treaty
No consent
No annexation

It has been 200 years since the missionaries (1820) have arrived.  

Their contributions (the missionaries) of Christendom, the written word, and western ideas (land ownership, foreign technology, etc.) made quality advances to the people of Hawaii.  

But there was also negative consequences of the missionaries and western contact.  Such as oppression to Hawaiian culture, tradition, art, religion, and language.

In one sense the Hawaiian people were stripped of their identity, and made to forget the injustice and cruelty of certain American people who planted the seed of colonization in Hawaii.  

Colonization in Hawaii is evident.  It is a stronghold for the American military, a monopoly for wealthy entrepreneurs, and defiled with secular humanistic ideology.  

More and more Hawaiians and people of Hawaii are forgetting the true history of this place, and trading it for the comfort, security, and illusion of the American dream.  

Hawaii was a place of mass food production, high literacy, and sacred lands.
It has been a place of many cutting edge movements in technology, politics, race/ ethnicity, women's rights, etc.

Furthermore, Hawaii has been a neutral sovereign state and under international law no other country can occupy it for their own personal use.  Hawaii was to be a sanctuary for the world. Not just for one country.

Hawaiians and Hawaii people are not waking up to the truth of these facts.

Who has the rights to own land?
Who has the rights to water and water use?
Who will pay for the destruction of sacred sites and the natural land systems?
Its it right for someone to make a profit using what isn't theirs to begin with?

I know we all have to make a living here in Hawaii.  The next practical steps are harder to define, but what I am making a case for today about is the retelling of the truth.  Pulling down the curtain of deceit, deception, and lies.

“He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” -Micah 6:7-8

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.

EA Field School 2018 Journal Entry #3


“E ui aku ana au īa ʻoe, Aia i hea ka Wai a Kāne?”

Microbes and Lepo
-Connect kanaka to ʻĀina
-EA through oxygen “breath” entering through the flow of fresh water
-Can create favorable Conditions for Kalo in a complex community of Microbes
How are kanaka connected to the ʻĀina?
  Kanaka have inherited the world of microbes into their kino through the foods we eat, people we surround ourselves, and the world around us.  In the most literal sense we are what we eat.  Our body if not only made of these microscopic organisms but we ingest them in everything we eat.
  In the loʻi water is necessary for the growth of the kalo.  Water from the kahawai is diverted into the patches.  As water flows and moves the EA “air/ breath” gets mixed into the water molecules creating a more “mana full” energy source for the microscopic world to gain of of.  The EA of our foods are truly found in the foods found in traditional practices.
  Microbes create resources for plants, animals and environment to thrive.  Like a social community they work together feeding and communing to create a potent atmosphere for life to thrive.

Microbes and Moʻolelo 
Some moʻolelo of kahiko use traditional storytelling to describe the microbe world:
-Moʻolelo to pass down key information about wahi
-Moʻolelo to remember key times and events
-Moʻolelo to teach valuable lessons to generations
Are moʻolelo kahiko unscientific?
  Those not familiar with the concept of kaona would not be able to appreciate the multi dimensional multi purpose of moʻolelo.  Many misconceptions about Indigenous stories come to the conclusion that these kinds of stories are irrelevant to today's world.  In recent studies this could be the farthest idea from the truth.  Many examples found in moʻolelo kahiko of wahi show how many of the “magic, mystical, even mysterious” events and phenomenons can be traced empirically.  Such as the changing of colors in wai, kumu lāʻau, fish disappearing, etc.  Moʻolelo turn interest not only to the valuable lessons and haʻawina the story holds, but is traced to the natural science of what is happening with its respected worldview.

Microbes and Networks 
Microbes Communicate with each other like as in a network
Microbes create atmospheres for multi cultural environments for diversity of species
Microbes interact in peculiar ways not yet fully understood by science world

“Aia i ke kuahiwi, I ke kualono, i ke awaawa, i ke kahawai; Aia i laila ka Wai a Kāne.”

Friday, May 18, 2018

O Na Kumu Akua

May 17, 2018
O Na Kumu Akua a Pau


 In this naturalistic worldview of our post - enlightenment culture, the idea of gods and goddesses, spirits, and shapeshifters are only held in fairy tales, myths, and children stories.  The modern western man has found himself comfortable in this matrix of the natural unguided process of science and nothing else.  There is no room for what we cannot see with our natural eyes.  There is no sacred (connection with God or gods), only the secular ( whatever club they chose to be a part of, and the “cult”ure attitudes and behaviors). 
 In many indigenous world views the world is saturated and highly active with spirits.  There is a yet another layer to what we can see with our natural eyes, the realm of the sacred.  In this realm there are powers, principalities, and forces manifested by free agents with unimaginable qualities (Iʻo, Kane, Ku, Lono, Kanaloa, Wakea, Papa, Pele etc.).  With many of the world tribes (such as the Babylonians, Canaanites, Egyptians, Sumerians, and even the greek philosophers)  and upon thousands of thousands of years many of the worlds tribes have come to known these forces, ideals,and powers and may have even found ways to harness, collaborate, and maybe even work with these unseen agents.  
  In Christianity,  most evangelical theology regarding Godʻs sovereignty and angels, these principalities and unseen forces are just extensions of Godʻs will.  As if these agents were just divine robots, extensions of this kind of god.  These gods, spirits, angels, whatever you call them are static beings without the choice of making their own will come to pass.  Some sects of christianity would even go so far as to say not only this is true, but that all of humanity shares this same kind of static, zombie like, notion of a highly controlling dictatorship.  In other words we are all robots, mechanically programed, made to do the bidding of a cold distant creator.  But is this true?
 In the Hebrew bible in the book of Daniel chapter 10.  We see interactions with angels/ spirit beings taken on human forms who are either cooperating with the will of God or battling against it.  In this chapter we see the “guardian” Michael battling the god of Persia and soon awaiting the god of Greece.  There is a kind of warfare that the natural eye cannot see.  It was an assumption in the Hebrew culture of the existence of other godʻs.  And that each supernatural being like humans had free will choice to participate or wage war against each other.  Here a different perspective is seen.  One where the world we live in is as dynamic as the personalities of the individual himself as well as this free will is extended to the unseen forces and “gods” as well.  
 We see more examples within scripture of free agents choosing their own will such as the Behemoth, Leviathan, Yam (in the Psalms), Rahab, “the serpent of the air”, satan, etc.  It would not be a far assumption to take this idea and project it to the different cultures and ancient stories of other gods, goddesses, and supernatural agents.
 In Hawaiʻi there is a pantheon of gods and goddesses (akua), guardian spirits (ʻaumakua), wandering spirits (huakaʻi pō), and a deep connection to the Kupuna ( ancestors and aliʻi).  It is a life of rich and deep connection to the ʻāina and the moʻolelo in which is passed down from generation to generation.  The awareness of the activity of the spirit world was woven into every activity through pule, oli, and aloha ʻāina.  Just as Daniel was able to familiarize himself with the guardians of the geographical territories the Hawaiian people (like many indigenous people groups) were able to recognize the imprints of these gods and goddesses.  Not only there was an awareness to this reality, Hawaiianʻs took it a step further through the Aliʻi.  Aliʻi were manifested gods on earth.  They were the representation of the powers and authorities that were required to maintain Pono (ballance).  Some Aliʻi were so sacred that if even their shadow were casted on you the consequence would be death.  The spiritual world was not even hinted as a joke to the Hawaiian people.  Much care, attention, and sacrifice was given that they would be in harmony with all of creation (seen and unseen).   
 With the coming of the Calvinistic Christians to Hawaiʻi in 1819, came many positive and negative impacts.  With Calvinistic Christians from the ABCFM  leaning more to a hellenistic Aristotelian view as God as an Infinite in power, knowledge, and size (omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent etc.), God became less personal and relational and more abstract and authoritative.  And all gods and goddesses were reduced to evil and wicked in the eyes of the uncultured missionaries.  With this hellenistic christianity hints of Gnosticism became yet another invasive species.  The idea of the physical being evil and only the “spiritual” is good, came many destruction of the sacred sites, places, and geographical locations.  Another school of thought that came with the missionaries were the “Apatheia” of Stocisim.  Where in Hawaiian worldview you are an active agent with the gods, the school of greek thought that influenced these missionaries came the idea of “gods providence”.  That whatever happened you could not change it, it is the natural, unstoppable will of god.  
 Here we start to see the sterilization of religion and spirituality and the split between the sacred and the secular.  Does one leave the complex dynamic interconnected spiritual world for a more straightforward, academic, greek focused religion?  While both alternatives donʻt seem very outdated these were some of the very questions the people of the past (and present) have to answer deep within.  Is it easier to stay objective and passive?  Yes.  It seems better to not event mention these types of topics at all.  But is it beneficial to for the spirit of a man to see beyond himself and into the realm of the unknown?  Yes, but only with guidance and council from the spirit of wisdom and the guardians entrusted to keep pono in their respective territories.