Big Island Talk Story by Jan Wizinowich
  • Home
  • About Author
  • Resources
  • Talk Stories
    • Hamakua
    • Honoka'a
    • Kawaihae
    • Kiho'alu
    • Kona
    • Music
    • Paniolo
    • Puna
    • Travels
    • Wa'a
    • Waimea
  • Oral History
    • Oral History with Audio
    • Oral History with Video
    • Oral Histories with Text
    • Books Authored by Jan Wizinowich

Hanauna Ola: Sustaining the Generations through Voyaging      Ke Ola Magazine  Jan. / Feb. 2018

2/6/2018

0 Comments

 
PictureWa'a crew member Keomailani Case takes a sun sight.
For centuries the spirit of the voyaging canoe lay dormant only to be reawakened with a question: Is it possible to sail a voyaging canoe to Tahiti using non-instrument navigation? Now, many years later on Hawaiʽi Island Pwo navigator Chadd Paishon asked a different question: Can this island provision one canoe for one voyage?
  “Some years ago before we started the worldwide voyage, on island already we've got our school garden. I was trying to figure out for myself, what do I say to the garden folks about the canoe? If our kūpuna were able to come here aboard their canoes and able to sustain themselves, then is it possible for us to provision one canoe for one voyage?” said Chadd
  Land and waʽa crew are striving to answer that question with a resounding “Yes!” through a three year Administration for Native Americans (ANA) grant awarded to Na Kalai Waʽa for the Hanauna Ola program, which will culminate in a sail to Papahānaumokuākea in 2019.
  Began in 2016 and now in its second year, the ʽOhana Makaliʽi is digging deep into traditions to prepare for a 2019 sail that will be fully provisioned from the soil and hands of the island and in the process re-establish the cultural practices that make up a healthy voyaging based life.
  “At Na Kalai Waʽa, what we try to do is to re-discover what that core is and try to live that legacy. And that legacy is to involve everybody. Not only human beings but animals too. The health of the ocean. It's not separate. It's pretty much everything,” said Shorty Bertelmann, Pwo Navigator and Hanauna Ola sail director.
  Along with 30 waʽa crew, the program is made up of a group of ten school gardens plus Hōʽea Moku, the Na Kalai Waʽa canoe garden in Kohala, who will endeavor to provision Makaliʽi for a one month voyage.​

PictureMakali'i ready to depart Kawaihae for a training cruise to Hana.
Waʽa Crew 
  In its first year the 30 participating waʽa crew engaged in an array of trainings that will equip them with the complex skill set they will need to be successful crew members, but primary for a voyage is to know one’s place. “It's not just a matter of going. Before you leave you have to know everything about your island, the birds, the reef. Our journey is to learn our island. When we arrive, we’re Big Islanders who came,” said Shorty.
  The crew explored wahi pana such as Kumukahi, the eastern most point of the island and a traditional embarkation point; Koʽa Heiau Holomoana, Mahukona’s navigational heiau; and Kalaemano Cultural Center at Kaupulehu  where the star compass Kukuku o Kalani, recently moved now resides.
  At a year two orientation gathering last October, crew gathered around Kukulu o Kalani. The star compass, brought to Hawaiʽi by master voyager Mau Piailug, is an essential navigational tool. “It’s the origin; the place to begin. It’s that beginning point that allows you to understand the rising and setting. That whole continuum that's going on right now. Where the sun goes down and where it’s going to come up tomorrow, where that star is going to come from. Where the wind is coming from. Feel that wind on your face and notice that subtle change and when it starts to shift,” explained Chadd.
  This is where navigational knowledge begins, but it continues on the water with crew observing and reading the story displayed in the sky and then to set and hold a course using natural elements as a guide.
  It’s fall equinox and Makaliʽi awaits her crew just inside the sea wall at Kawaihae Harbor. On this day they will be sailing north and if they find the wind and the conditions are right, will sail across the channel to Hana and back. But before leaving the dock for a sail the crew gathers and clasps hands for a blessing and to set intentions.
  Shorty questions the crew about what they notice about conditions: What is the meaning of the position of the sun? What do those clouds mean? How has the sky changed from sunrise? From last night?
  The crew will also learn about and experience all the roles on the canoe. Everyone will learn to lead and to navigate, but at the core of it all is spirit. The canoe fosters an intangible spiritual connection that goes far beyond skills and schedules. “We can do everything we need to do to voyage. Be on track and all the training and everything, but for voyaging we need to connect to the universe and that's multi-dimensional.  That's like all the training plus another dimension,” said Shorty.

Picture
Pwo Navigator Chadd Paishon explains the star compass to canoe crew.
PictureCanoe crew orientation at Kalaemano.
Hanai Waʽa
  Hanai means to foster, sustain, connect and it’s that spirit that infuses every aspect of Hanauna Ola. “The spiritual journey is a part of us and it's never separated. When we start to talk about ceremony, protocol, it's the same with everything we do. When we're putting our plants in the ground it’s the intention you plant with, the spirit you plant with,” said Chadd.

  At the heart of hanai waʽa voices are raised in chant, a conduit to the deep spirit that connects everything and is the manner in which voices are sent out on the wind when a canoe leaves the shores.  
  “Chanting is huge, an integral part of everything that we do. A chant might ask permission for a canoe to begin its journey, announce the arrival of a canoe to the welcoming land base, or recite the genealogy of its creation. To chant with all your heart with a complete understanding of the intention and purpose is an essential part of the kuleana of the chanter when it comes to the canoe,” explained Kumu Pua Case.  


Picture
Keala Kahuanui works with land crew at Kalaemano.
Land Crew 
  Traditionally the skills and contributions of the entire island went into making a successful voyage. Just as the canoe crew has many dimensions to their training, the land crew, coordinated by Keala Kahuanui and Chadd, will be engaging in growing, preserving and preparing food to sustain the canoe crew on their journey, as well as creating cordage.
  Representatives from the four participating districts of Hilo, Hāmakua, Kohala and Kona meet on a regular basis to learn about and prepare foods and cordage.
  Supplying healthy, balanced food for the crew without benefit of refrigeration is the challenge being taken on by the school gardens and the first quarter of the year focused on trainings in food processing and preservation such as dehydration, pickling and canning.
  In November land crew members met in Laupahoehoe to study preservation techniques and process foods. “We made sauerkraut the first day. We made lilikoi, strawberry and mango jam.  We do four hours of reading [safe food preparation] and then we go and do the hands-on work. Next week we're doing fish, chicken and sausage making and it's all going to be preserved,” said Heather Sarsona, Kanu o ka ʽĀina garden coordinator.


PictureHanauna Ola land crew prepares sauerkraut at Laupahoehoe kitchen.
  The process of preparing for the voyage will encourage sustainability in our island community. “The preservation class. The most beautiful thing for me is that it's teaching us to not waste. To stock our own pantries at home. So that whenever we're going on a voyage everyone can contribute from their pantry and wasn't that how it was in the old days?” said Heather. 
  The other focus area for the land crew is cordage, which literally and metaphorically connects everything together. It lashes the canoe together and binds the crew to the canoe, the community and the island and is a key part of canoe protocols. The first step is to learn about hau, hala, niu and laʽi, some of the main cordage plants and prepare them for braiding.
  “All the different districts are looking at the resources within their community. If we understand that those resources are still here and take care of it and know how to use it. It's beautiful. That's what Hanau Ola is. To insure that those exact things, those experiences continue. That they don't stop,” said Chadd.  

PictureCaptain and Pwo Navigator, Shorty Bertelmann orients the crew.
But even beyond the voyage, the hope is that the roots of Hanauna Ola will establish themselves as a foundation for a sustainable, healthy life. “If we can provision Makaliʽi, 14 crew members, three meals a day, for a month then we can feed our families. If we can do that for the canoe, it's possible we can do it for our community. Whatever we do on the canoe is really a reflection back on what we can do on our moku,” said Chadd.
  The ʽOhana Waʽa has sailed many journeys and the Hanauna Ola program is the wind beneath the sails that will extend those journeys throughout the generations.
 “What I’ve learned from the canoe is that it's a community based entity. There's intention behind it. There's spirit behind it. There's family behind it. Every bit from mauka to makai is wrapped up between those two hulls. It's through Hanauna Ola, that we will sustain the generations through voyaging,” concluded Chadd. 


0 Comments

Bringing Hokulea Home: The Community Gathers to Honor Waimea Voyagers      North Hawaii News   April 7, 2017

6/16/2017

0 Comments

 
PicturePomai Bertelmann and Ka'iulani Murphy steer for home
On Wed. April 12 at 5 p.m., the community will gather at Kahilu Town Hall to honor the Waimea canoe crew members who will be sailing Hokulea home from Tahiti on the last leg of her Malama Honua Voyage.
   
Although sharing Waimea roots, each crew member has their own journey to the canoe. Kala Thomas, who will sail on Hikianalia, grew up with the canoe in Waimea. 
​   
“Kala Thomas was in seventh grade when Uncle Tiger Espere, Steve Coffee, and Gary Benson built the Hoku’ili’ili at the school. He helped build that. So his genealogy is actually from that time,” said Pomai Bertelmann, who will captain Hokulea.

Picture
Pua Lincoln
    Pua Lincoln, who will be part of the navigation team on Hōkūleʽa a, was at Waimea Elementary when Mauloa sailed into her life. “My first official introduction to any canoe was when Mauloa was built. I was at Waimea Elementary and they took her into the gym and set her up and when I saw her, I was just awestruck. And then later on I got trained to sail that canoe and that was the hook,” said Lincoln.
​   
From an early age, Lincoln was aware of her family’s voyaging legacy. “I had heard stories from my own kupuna and my father about our ancestral migrational path and how we came from a family of voyagers,” said Lincoln. Lincoln is humbled and honored, “To be part of this epic journey to bring Hōkūleʽa home. When she comes home, it's full circle and all about returning her back to all of those people whose prayers have kept her going, moving and afloat, perpetuating her ability to persevere,” said Lincoln.
Picture
Ka'iulani Murphy 2000 voyage.
After finishing high school at Kamehameha Schools on Oahu, lead navigator Ka’iulani Murphy found her way to the canoe when she attended a lecture by Nainoa Thompson at the Hawaiian Studies Center at U.H. Manoa.
    “To hear Nainoa talk, I was in awe and my sophomore year I took voyaging courses.
Hōkūleʽa was in dry dock and so I spent Saturdays and volunteer work days there. When she was relaunched spring semester, our class got to sail her to Molokai as part of her sea trials. I was one of the few that didn't get seasick so they asked me to come back,” said Murphy.
    But Murphy also has strong roots with the aina in Waimea and in her family’s Waipio Valley loi where they grew kalo. “All three of us Pomai, Pua Lincoln and I all grew up in Kuhio Village. My mom's father is from
Waipiʽo and growing up our family spent just about every weekend there on the ʽāina. I realized later how fortunate we were to grow up like that,” said Murphy.
    In 2000 Murphy took her first blue water voyage from Tahiti to Hawaii and she looks forward to repeating the experience. “I love that my first voyage was coming home to Hawaii. It's really special to see the islands pulled up from the sea. It really gives you a sense of how our kupuna first saw the islands when they came” said Murphy.
​    Although a repeat of her 2000 experience, this voyage will take Murphy to the next level in a long journey with the canoe. “Pomai and I were nervous about stepping into those roles but at the same time realizing it isn't about us, but about our teachers making the investment over the years, hoping that we would assume the roles as time went on. But oh my gosh, it's now already?” said Murphy.
PictureClay Bertelmann
Pomai Bertelmann, who will captain the voyage, has grown up with the canoe. Her father Clay Bertelmann was instrumental in the creation of Mauloa, Makali’i and Na Kalai Waa, the Hawaii Island canoe organization.
    For Bertelmann this final leg and the entire Malama Honua represents the next phase, “The leadership’s vision of succession. Over the last 40 years we've evolved into a thriving voyaging family and community. It is a great image to see all of these diverse people coming together and see this moku move forward because of all of that collaboration. A life force that comes into one entity and works synergistically.”
    Synergy was at work in the creation of a crew list, a complicated task that was shared with Murphy. “What we worked to do was create lists on our own, come back and match them up. I had to remember, go back through all kinds of documentations, crew lists and look at different skills. It's been a lot of relying upon what I've learned and solidifying decisions with pule,” said Bertelmann. ​

PictureScott Kanda, Oiwi T.V.
A crucial quality for crew members is the willingness to participate in exchanges with the community, without which none of this would be possible. “This voyage is what the community has given to us. It’s an indication that the community has supported us and has been behind us all the way,” said Bertelmann.
   
Technological improvements have made it possible to engage communities across the globe. Scot Kanda, who grew up in Honokaa and works with Oiwi T.V. will be sailing on Hikianalia. Kanda brings communication skills to the canoe. “They stand their watch and then they go into the editing bay and they cut and they edit raw footage,” said Bertelmann.
​   
When the voyage is completed, the Ohana Waa will begin to put lessons learned into place on our aina. “In the wake of this voyage, to see the collective team that may be coming together to move forward with the larger purpose of aina-based education in our schools and communities,” said Bertelmann.

Picture
The voyage home will be one of gratitude for Hokulea’s far-reaching influence. “Voyaging is one thing, but language, education, music, dancing all of those things were ignited by the matriarch Hōkūleʽa ,” said Lincoln.
​
0 Comments

Makali'i: Voyaging into the Future                                                 North Hawaii News  2/3/17

2/6/2017

0 Comments

 
Picture
Canoe Kupuna Patti Soloman and crew member Lehua Ah Sam on deck at a volunteer day. Photo: Landry Fuller
    Makalii, the Hawaii Island voyaging canoe originally launched in 1995, will soon be under sail after a major dry docking that began in October 2013.    Last fall, Ohana Makalii — also known as Na Kalai Waa — received an Administration for Native Americans grant. In November they started the Hanauna Ola (Sustaining the Generations through Voyaging) program, and last Saturday crew training began. The funds will also support provisioning efforts at island school gardens. The culmination of the three-year program will be a voyage to two of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands, Nihoa and Mokumanamana (Necker). Team members will begin training in the water by this summer.
    The program allows Pwo Navigator Shorty Bertelmann, who sailed with Papa Mau on the first Hokulea voyage, to transmit his knowledge to the existing crew members and help them advance and get to leadership levels,” said Keala Kahuanui, program coordinator.

Picture
Pwo Navigator Shorty Bertelmann (left) watches as Na Kalai Waa employee and apprentice Lei’ohu Santos-Colburn explains to crew member Kala Mossman how to apply varnish to the canoe’s palekai. Photo: Landry Fuller
PictureChadd Paishon and Pomai Bertelmann
    The second pwo navigator, Chadd Paishon, is working with the land crews made up of participating school staff who will support every aspect of the voyage. “Chadd’s kuleana is to activate our community. Our Ohana Makalii feels deeply about our communities being intricately involved in our efforts, whether voyages or activities on land,” Kahuanui said, who is assisting Paishon.
    The land crew will learn about three different practices. The first is Ai Pono (eat healthy). “A few years ago at the Ku Aina Pa (garden educators program), Chadd noted that our ancestors were able to traverse this ocean and asked, ‘Can we provision one canoe on one voyage?’” Kahuanui said.
    This question set Malaai Garden’s Director Amanda Rieux and Waimea Middle School students on a quest to feed the canoe crew by creating healthy, storable foods produced from the garden. To prepare for the voyage to the Northwest Hawaiian Islands, the land crews will need to provision the canoe for a 30-day voyage with a 14 voyaging crew.
    “This is a huge effort to have the time and resources to intentionally provision our canoes better,” Kahuanui said. “If we provision the canoe for 30 days that’ll be a good test, good data collection. From Hawaii we can go any direction and reach land in 30 days.” But the hope is the voyage will continue on land after the canoe has returned.
​    “We are working together in the name of a voyage, but also in the name of the continuous voyage of being a little island in the middle of the ocean. We are creating the processes and protocols on how to preserve foods so that when we have an influx of weather and we have these emergency kits, perhaps we’re not running to the store. There’s a lot of work to do,” she said.


Picture
Makalii crew members and volunteers continue workdays during a major dry docking of the canoe that began in October 2013. Photo Landry Fuller
PictureKeala Kahuanui
    The Hanai Waa practice entails “learning about our ceremonies, protocols, oli and mele … creating new ones for this voyage but also maintaining the foundations,” Kahuanui explained. Embarking on an ocean voyage is to acknowledge and experience a higher power, which is where Hanai Waa (embrace, care for) comes into play.
    “Sometimes we get caught up in the physical side, training, planting, and we forget there’s another side: the spirit. It’s making sure that everyone understands that as much as it’s a physical journey, the spiritual journey is also a part of us and for us. It’s one and the same. It’s never separated,” Paishon said. “When we start to talk about ceremony and protocol, it’s the same with everything we do. When we’re putting our plants in the ground it’s the intention you plant with, the spirit you plant with. That’s really what hanai is — that connection.”
    The third practice is Pilina Kaula, meaning closely connected strands. Cordage was crucial to the voyaging canoe and was a prized gift. Olona, which is being grown at Ho’ea (the canoe garden in Kohala), provided durable strength far superior to any available European cordage, and literally held the voyaging canoes together.
    “They’ll learn to propagate the plants and make cordage from them that will be used in our ceremonies upon arrival and departure. Pilina Kaula is the physical side of Hanai Waa, creating connections. Pilina, (closeness) to the cordage, to the moku (island), our waa and the islands that we’re going to,” Kahuanui said.
     As part of the grant, students from 11 partner schools on Hawaii Island will be trained in the near future after their teachers complete training that started recently. In North Hawaii, participants will come from Kanu o Ka Aina, Alo Kehau o ka Aina Mauna, Punana Leo o Waimea, Kohala Elementary and Middle School and Laupahoehoe Public Charter School.
    “Our schools are really excited. The movement of the waa creates that excitement and the desire to participate. For those who are not voyagers, this allows them to engage and provide their resources and expertise. Everybody has a piece of the puzzle,” she said.
​    The land crew will have the chance to experience “Makalii magic” and get to experience authentic learning. “Makalii is very good at creating relationships and this will set that precedence. The schools are encouraged to come to the canoe and build a relationship. The hull space is where their food will get stored. To see that, they will realize that what they’re doing is affecting more than them and their classmates. It’s helping to perpetuate and sustain our traditions,” Kahuanui said.
    While there is a foundation of knowledge and experience to draw from, for the canoe to continue to voyage it requires everyone to find and share their strengths and work together. “The beauty of the training is that we’re not supposed to have all of these already set. It’s a process and we’re going to learn from each other. We’re going to build upon our strengths and that’s the beauty of voyaging. You’re going to depend on each other’s strengths and challenges to reach our destination,” she said.
​    Hanauna Ola is the next phase in a long journey to recapture the practices that made it possible for the ancestors to thrive. “We are so fortunate to live in this day and time. All the other layers have been built up and now we have this layer we can work on and start to lay out the foundation for the next generation of voyagers as a template of what we have done. What Chadd and Shorty are doing is sharing their knowledge with the next generations of canoe crew and laying down a path for future generations to follow,” Kahuanui concluded.

0 Comments

    Archives

    November 2022
    August 2022
    March 2022
    January 2022
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    January 2021
    September 2020
    June 2020
    March 2020
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    July 2019
    May 2019
    March 2019
    January 2019
    November 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    September 2017
    August 2017
    June 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    August 2016
    June 2016
    December 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    April 2015
    February 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    July 2014
    May 2014
    December 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    September 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012

    Categories

    All
    2nd Division Marines
    2% Open Space Fund
    Adaptive Reuse
    Administration For Native Americans
    Adoption
    Aha Punanaleo
    A Hua He Inoa
    Ahu Akivi
    Ahualoa
    Ahupuaʻa
    Aina Based Education
    ʽĀinakea
    Ainamalu
    Ai Pono
    'Alae Cemetery
    Ala Kahakai National Historic Trail
    Ala Kahakai Trail
    Ala Kahakai Trail Association
    Alan Tokunaga
    Alapa'inui
    Alenuihaha Channel Crossing
    Alethea Lai
    Al Jubitz
    Alo Kehau O Ka Aina Mauna
    Amanda Rieux
    Amaury Saint-Gilles
    Amida Buddha
    Anaehoomalu
    Anaehoʻomalu Bay
    Andy Anderson
    Angel Pilago
    Anghor Wat
    Animation
    Anna Akaka
    Anna's Pond
    Annexation
    Aric Arakaki
    Arioli
    Armstrong Yamamoto
    Art And History
    Art And Sol
    Artists
    Artists Cooperative
    Audrey S. Furukawa Scholarship
    Audrey Veloria
    Aumakua
    Auntie Genoa Keawe
    Aunty Agnes Aniu
    Aunty Betty Webster
    Aunty Lani Akau
    Aunty Maile
    Auwai
    Ava Fujimoto Strait
    AW Carter
    Baby Steps
    Barbara Haight
    Barbara Nobriga
    Barbara Robertson
    Barrie Rose
    Barry Rose
    Battery Storage
    Before The Flood
    Bennett Dorrance
    Bernie Ohia
    Bertelmann
    Betty Jenkins
    Betty Meinardus
    Big Horn Medicine Wheel
    Big Island Giving Tree
    Bill Sproat
    Birth Stones
    BISAC
    Bishop Museum
    Blue Planet Energy Lab
    Blue Planet Research
    Bobbi Caputo
    Bob Juettner
    Bob Momson
    Bonaire
    Boys To Men
    Bryan Watai
    Bryce Groark
    Build A Better Brain
    Bullying
    Byakko Shinko Kai
    Byoung Yong Lee
    Canada France Hawaii Telescope
    Canoe
    Canoe Garden
    Caribbean
    Catalina Cain
    Catherine Morgan
    Cathy Lowder
    Cathy Morgan
    Cattle
    Chadd Paishon
    Chair Yoga
    Charlene Iboshi
    Charlie Campbell
    Chelsey Dickson
    Cherry Blossom
    Cheung Family
    Chiefess Hoopiliahue
    Children's Advocacy Center
    Choy Hung Coon
    Chris Hawkins
    Christina Richardson
    Ciro Podany
    C. Kalā Asing
    Clarence Mills
    Clay Bertelmann
    Clem Lam
    Cliff Johns
    Cody Dwight
    Cody Pueo Pata
    Collage
    Commission Of Water Resource
    Community Meal
    Congji Chon
    Connect For Success
    Conservation
    Cordage
    Counseling
    Craig McClain
    Croatia
    Dalani Tanahy
    Dana Moody
    Daniel Legler
    Danny Akaka
    Dave Allbee
    Dave Coon
    Dave Reisland
    David Gomes
    Dennis Chun
    Department Of Hawaiian Homelands
    Descendents
    DHHL
    DHS
    Diane Kaneali'i
    Dickson
    DLNR
    Dolly Loo
    Donjihoe Investment Company
    Dorrance Foundation
    Dot Uchima
    Doug Simons
    Dr. Isabella Abbott
    Dr. Ka'iu Kimura
    Dr. Larry Kimura
    Dr. Michael Graves
    Dr. Noenoe Silva
    Drug Treatment
    Dr. Wasan
    Dry Forest
    Dry Forest Conservation
    Dryland Forest
    Dryland Forest Hui 'Ohana
    Earl Bakken
    Earl's Garage
    Earl Veloria
    East Hawai'i Cultural Center
    Edith Kawai
    Edwin Lindsey
    `Ehuehu I Ka Pono
    Eileen Lum
    Eizuchi Higaki
    Elaine Flores
    Electrolyzer
    Elijah Rabang
    Elizabeth Lee
    Elizabeth Lindsey Kimura
    Elizabeth Woodhouse
    Elliot Parsons
    Elmer Lim
    Emalani Case
    E Mau Na Ala Hele
    Emily Weiss
    Energy
    English
    Environmental
    Environmental Education
    Environmental Monitoring And Control Center
    Eric Dodson
    Estria Foundation
    Estria Miyashiro
    Eunice Veincent
    Europe
    E. Woods Low
    Fair American
    Fairwind
    Feather Lei
    Fern White
    Fig's
    Figueroa
    Firehouse Gallery
    Floria Shepard
    Food Forest
    Four Seasons Resort
    Franz Solmssen
    Fred Cachola
    Friends Of Lili'uokalani Gardens
    Friends Of The Future
    Fr. Merrill
    Fuel Cells
    Gakuo Okabe
    Gary Chong
    Gary Eoff
    George Fry
    George Higaki
    George Hook
    Ginny Bivaletz
    Gino Amar
    Gourds
    Green Technology
    Gungbei
    Gwen Sanchez
    Gwen Yamamoto
    Gyo Mun Kim
    Hae Kyung
    Haia Auweloa
    Hale Kea
    Hale Kukui
    Hale Wa'a
    Hamakua
    Hamakua Bukkyo Kaido
    Hamakua Coffee
    Hanai Waa
    Hanauna Ola
    Harbin China
    Harold Craig
    Harry Buscher
    Harry Kim
    Hawaiian Ancestors
    Hawaiian Civic Club
    Hawaiian Cultural Practices
    Hawaiian Language
    Hawaiian Naming Practices
    Hawaiian Stilt
    Hawaiian Studies
    Hawaii Community Foundation
    Hawai'i Episcopal Academy
    Hawai'i Handweaver's Hui
    Hawaii Island Land Trust
    Hawai'i Island School Garden Network
    Hawai‘i Ponoʽī
    Hawai'i Preparatory Academy
    Hawai'i Public Seed Initiative
    Hawaii Sailing Canoe Association
    Hawaii State Art Museum
    Hawai'i State Mental Hospital
    Hawai'i Theater
    Hawi
    Hawi Christmas Lu'au
    Health And Wellness
    Health Maps
    Heather Sarsona
    HEEA
    Hee'ia
    He'eia Stream
    Helen Cassidy
    Helen Lincoln Lee Kwai
    Henk Rogers
    Herb Sigurdson
    High Chiefess Wao
    Highways Act Of 1892
    Hi‘iaka
    Hi'ilawe
    Hilo
    Hiroki Morinoue
    Hisao Kimura
    Hisashi Shimamura
    History
    Hohonu Journal
    Hokukano Ranch
    Hokulea
    Hokule'a
    Hokulea 2007 Voyage
    Hokuloa Church
    Hoku'ula
    Holistic Learning
    Holistic Teaching
    Holly Green
    Holly Sargent-Green
    Holomoana
    Homeless
    Honokaa
    Honokaa High School
    Howard Hall
    HPA
    Hualalai Cultural Center
    Hula
    Hulihe'e Palace
    Hydrogen Fuel
    Ieie Fiber
    Ihai
    Ike Hawaii
    Ili'ahi
    'Imiloa Astronomy Center
    Incheon Korea
    Indiana Jones
    Indigenous
    Inha Technical College
    Innovations Charter School
    Inoa Ho'omana'o
    Inoa Kūamuamu
    Inoa Pō
    Integrated Curriculum
    Ipo Kahele
    Isaac Davis
    IUCN
    Iwi
    Jack London
    Jade Bowman
    James Fay Kaaluea Kahalelaumamane
    James Kurokawa
    James Spencer
    James Taylor
    Jane Chao
    Janice Gail
    Japan
    Japanese Immigrants
    Japanese Maritime Students
    Jared Chapman
    Jay West
    Jean Boone
    Jen Lawson
    Jenny Cheesbro
    Jerry Bess
    Jesse Potter
    Jim Frasier
    Jim Jarret
    Joan Campbell
    Jodo Shu Mission
    Joel Tan
    Joe Sigurdsan
    Joe Souza
    Johanna Tilbury
    John Defries
    John Hoover
    Jordon Hollister
    Julian Fried
    Julie Williams
    Jun Balanga
    Ka`epaoka`āwela
    Ka`epaoka`āwela
    Ka Haka 'Ula O Ke'elikolani College Of Hawaiian Language
    Kahalu'u Bay Education Center
    Kahekili
    Kahiki
    Kahilu Theater
    Kahilu Theatre
    Kaho'olawe
    Kahua Ranch
    Kai Hawanawana
    Kaiholena
    Kai Kuleana
    Kailapa
    Kai Opua
    Ka'iu Kimura
    Ka'iulani Murphy
    Ka'iwakiloumoku
    Kalaemano
    Kalahuipua'a
    Kalaniana'ole Park
    Kalani Flores
    Kalani Schutte
    Kalaoa
    Ka Lei Maile Alii
    Kalepa Baybayan
    Kalo
    Kaloko-Honokōhau
    Kaluna Henrietta Ha'alo'u Kainapau
    Ka Makahiki Pule Aina Holo
    Kamakura
    Kamana Beamer
    Kamana'opono Crabbe
    Kamehameha Park
    Kamehameha Schools
    Kamehameha Statue
    Kamehameha V
    Kamiki
    Kamo`oalewa
    Kanaka'ole
    Kanak'ole
    Kanani Kaulu Kukui
    Kane
    Kane'ohe
    Kanile'a 'Ukulele
    Kani‘lehua
    Kanoa Castro
    Kano O Ka Aina
    Kanu O Ka Aina
    Kanu O Ka Aina Academy
    Kapa'au
    Kapakai
    Kapulei Flores
    Kapzphotography
    Karen Eoff
    Karin Hazelhoff
    Kar Tow
    Katie Benioni
    Katsu Goto
    Kauai
    Kaua'i Community College
    Kaua'i Kuhio Day Long Distance Race
    Kaʽūpūlehu
    Kawaihae
    Kawaihae Canoe Club
    Kawaihae I
    Kazuo Nakamura
    KCA
    Kea'au Kimchi Factory
    Keakealani
    Keala Kahuanui
    Kealakaʽi Knoche
    Kealakekua
    Kealakekua Bay
    Keali'i Maielua
    Keanuiomano Stream
    Keaukaha
    Kehena Ditch
    Keiki Surf For The Earth
    Kekelaokalani
    Kekuhi Kanaka'ole Kanahele
    Keku'iapoiwa
    Ke Kumu Aina
    Kenneth Barthel
    Keoki Freeland
    Keoki Manu
    Keomailani Case
    Keoni Kuoha
    Keoni Lindsey
    Keoua
    Kiho'alu
    Kiholo
    Kila
    Kilauea Plantation
    Kilo
    King Kamehameha
    Koa Canoe
    Koa'ekea
    Koa Forest
    Koaia
    Koaia Corridor
    Koaia Tree Sanctuary
    Koai'e Cove
    Kohakohau
    Kohala
    Kohala Center
    Kohala Coast
    Kohala Elementary
    Kohala High School
    Kohala Hospital
    Kohala Hospital Charitable Foundation
    Kohala Lihikai
    Kohala Middle School
    Kohala Mountain
    Kohala School
    Kohala Sugar
    Kohala Sugar Co.
    Kohala Village HUB
    Kohala Watershed
    Kohanaiki
    Kohanaiki Ohana
    Koh Ming Wei
    Kona
    Ko'o Heiau
    Korea History
    Korean Christian Institute
    Korean Natural Farming
    Koreans
    Krisin Souza
    Ku
    Ku Aina Pa
    Kue Petition
    Kūhiō
    Kuhio Village
    Ku Kahakalau
    Kukuihaele Landing
    Kukuku O Kalani
    Kulia Tolentino Potter
    Kulolo
    Kumukahi
    Kumu Kuwalu Anakalea
    Kumulipo
    Ku'ula
    Ku'ulei Keakealani
    Ku'ulei Kumai-Ho
    Kyoko Ikeda
    Lanakila Learning Center
    Lanakila Mangauil
    Lani Aliʽi
    Lanikepu
    Lanimaomao
    Lapakahi
    Laulau
    Laupahoehoe Public Charter School
    Lawaia Manu
    Leandra Rouse
    Leesa Robertson
    Legacy Land Preservation Program
    Lehua Ah Sam
    Leila Kimura Staniec
    Lei'ohu Santos-Colburn
    Leiola Mitchell
    Leo Mills
    Leonetta Mills
    Lester Kimura
    Lili'uokalani
    Lim Family
    Linda Kalawa
    Lindsey House
    Linus Chao
    Lio Lapaʻau
    Lisa Ferentinos
    Lisa Hadway
    Lithium Ion Phosphate Batteries
    Liz Moiha
    Lo'i
    Lokahi Giving Tree
    Lokahi Treatment Centers
    Long Ears Coffee
    Lono
    Lono Staff
    Lorenzo Lyons
    Lorraine Urbic
    Louisson Brothers
    Luakini
    Luana Zablan
    Lynn Taylor
    Mabel Beckley
    Mabel Tolentino
    Mahiki
    Mahiloe
    Mahina Patterson
    Mahukona
    Makahiki
    Makahiki Moku O Keawe
    Makahiki Run
    Makaiole
    Makalii
    Makali'i
    Makali'i Bertelmann
    Makuakaumana
    Makuakuamana
    Mala'ai
    Mala'ai Culinary Garden
    Malaai Garden
    Malama Ahupuaa
    Malama Honua
    Mallchok
    Maly
    Māmalahoa
    Manny Veincent
    Mao`hau Hele
    Marcia Ray
    Margaret Hoy
    Margaret Waldron
    Mariechan Jackson
    Marie McDonald
    Marine Life Conservation District
    Marseille
    Mary Ann Lim
    Mary Kaala Fay
    Mary Kawena Pukui
    Mary Pukui
    Mary Sky
    Mary Sky Schoolcraft
    Masahisa Goi
    Master Han Kyu Cho
    Matt Hamabata
    Maud Woods
    Ma'ulili
    Ma'ulili Dickson
    Mauloa
    Mauna A Wakea
    Mauna Kea
    Mauna Kea Forest Restoration Project
    Mauna Lani
    Maunaua
    Mau Piailug
    Mealani Lum
    Meg Dehning
    Meisner Technique
    Mele Murals
    Melora Purell
    Mentoring
    Micah Komoaliʻi
    Michelle Suber
    Mid Pacific
    Mieko Fujimoto
    Mike Nelson
    Miloli'i
    Mindfulness Training
    Miriam Michaelson
    Mission Blue
    Mitch Roth
    Miyakaiku Carpenters
    Mo'ikena
    Mo'ikini Heiau
    Mokumanamana
    Moku Of Keawe
    Moku O Hawaii Canoe Racing Association
    Mokuola
    Molly Sperry
    Moloka'i
    Momi Naughton
    Mo'okini Heiau
    Moon Soo Park
    Mormon Church
    Murals
    Music
    Nae'ole
    Nahaku Kalei
    Naha Stone
    Na Haumana La'au Lapa'au O Papa AuwaeAuw
    Na Kalai Waa
    Na Kalai Wa'a
    Nalei Kahakalau
    Namaste
    Nancy Botticelli
    Nancy Carr Smith
    Nancy Redfeather
    Nan Ga
    Nani Svendsen
    Nan Pi'ianaia
    Na 'Ohana Holo Moana
    Na Opio
    Na Pali Coast
    Napo'opo'o
    Nate Hendricks
    National Parks Service
    Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation
    Nature Conservancy
    Navigation
    Nestorio Domingo
    New Zealand
    NHERC Heritage Center
    Nita Pilago
    Niuli'i
    Noe Noe Wong-Wilson
    Noni Kuhns
    Nonprofits
    Nora Rickards
    North Hawai'i
    North Kohala
    North Kohala Community Development Plan
    North Kohala Community Resource Center
    Off Grid
    OHA
    Ohana
    Ohana Makalii
    'Ohana Wa'a
    Ohia Lehua
    Ohio State
    Oiwi T.V.
    'Ola'a
    Ola Ka 'Aina
    Olana
    Oliver Lum
    'Onohi Chadd Paishon
    Opae Ula
    Opai
    Open World Delegation
    Oral History
    'Oumuamua
    Paauhau
    Pacific Island Culture
    Pacific Studies
    Paddling
    Paishon
    Paka'alana
    Pakulea Gulch
    Palau
    Paleaku Peace Garden
    Palila
    Palmyra Atoll
    Pana'ewa Zoo
    Paniolo
    Papahana Kualoa
    Papahanaumokuakea
    Papa Henry Auwae
    Paradise Postal
    Park Bong Soong
    Parker Ranch
    Parker School
    Parls Nails Hun
    Pat Hall
    Patrick Ching
    Patti Soloman
    Peace Poles
    Pele
    Pelekane
    Pelekane Bay
    Pelika Andrade
    Pete Erickson
    Pete Hackstedde
    Photovoltaic
    Pilina Kaula
    Pine Trees
    Pit River
    Plein Air Art
    Pohaha I Ka Lani
    Polani Kahakalau
    Pololu
    Polynesians
    Pomai Bertelmann
    Ponoholo Ranch
    Pono Von Holt
    Pōwehi
    Predators
    Prince Kuhio Kalanianiole
    Printing
    Provisioning
    PTSD
    Pua Case
    Pua Kanaka'ole Kanahele
    Puako
    Puako: An Affectionate History
    Puako Community Association
    Puako Historical Society
    Puako Sugar Mill
    Pualani Kanahele
    Pualani Lincoln Maielua
    Pua Lincoln
    Public Art
    Pueo
    Pukui
    Puna
    Punahou
    Puna Kai Shopping Center
    Punana Leo O Waimea
    Punia
    Purell
    Puʻuhonua O Honaunau
    Pu'u Hulihuli
    Pu'ukohola Heiau
    Pu'u Pili
    Puʽuwaʽawaʽa
    Puʽuwaʽawaʽa Forest Bird Sanctuary
    Pu'u Wa'awa'a Ranch
    Pu'uwa'awa'a Ranch
    Qingdao China
    Queen Emma Land Co.
    Quilt
    Rain Gardens
    Rakuen
    Rangoon
    Raven Diaz
    Rebecca Most
    Rebecca Villegas
    Reef Teach
    Reforest Hawaii
    Reggie Lee
    Renewable Energy
    Requiem
    Resilient Hawaiian Community Initiati
    Reverend David Stout
    Rhonda Bell
    Richard Elliott
    Richard Pearson
    Richard Smart
    Ric Rocker
    Robbie Hines
    Roger Green
    Ronald Ibarra
    Rotary Club
    Royal Order Of Kamehameha I
    Run Off
    Ryon Rickard
    Ryoyu Yoshida
    Sacred Waters
    Sailing Canoes
    Salt Making
    Sam Huston State University
    Samuel Gruber
    Samuel Parker Jr.
    Sam Wilbur
    Sandlewood
    Sandy Takahashi
    San Francisco Call
    Sarah Kobayashi
    Savanack
    School Gardens
    Scot Plunkett
    Scott Kanda
    Scotty Grinsteiner
    Sea Of Hope
    Seri Luangphinith
    Shaelynne Monell-Lagaret
    Sharritt
    Shoichi Hino
    Shorty Bertelmann
    Silk Painting
    Sir Pua Ishibashi
    Ski Kwiatkowski
    Small World Preschool
    Solar
    Soloman
    Soloman Kapeliela
    Sony
    Sooty Tern
    Sophie Oki
    South Kohala Coastal Partnership
    Star Compass
    STARS Program
    STEM
    Stephanie Lindsey
    Steve Bess
    Steve Evans
    St. James Waimea
    Stonehenge
    Storks
    Student Art
    Sue Dela Cruz
    Sugarcane
    Susan Alexy
    Susan Maddox
    Susan Rickards
    Sustainable
    Sustain Generations
    Sweet Potato Cafe
    Sylvia-earl
    Syngman Rhee
    Taiwan
    Tanikichi Fujitani
    Tatoo
    Tesla
    The-nature-conservancy
    The Paths We Cross
    The-pod
    The-queens-women
    Thomas-metcalf
    Thomas Westin Lindsey
    Tiger Espere
    Tiger-esperi
    Tim Bostock
    Tim Hansen
    Tina Yohon
    Tom Hurley
    Tommy-remengesau
    Tommy-silva
    Tomoki Oku
    Tom-penny
    Tora Mosai
    Travel
    Travels
    Trish Ryan
    Tropical-conservation-and-biology
    Tsugi-kaimana
    Tutu's House
    Tyler-paikulicampbell
    Tyrone Rheinhart
    U.H. Hilo
    UHH Mauna Kea Observatory
    Uhiuhi
    Uhi‘wai
    Uh-manoa
    Uh-west-oahu
    'ukulele Class
    Ulu-garmon
    Ulu-laau-nature-park
    Ululani Patterson
    Ulupalakua Ranch
    Umekichi Tanaka
    Uncle Mac Poepoe
    Uncle Walter Wong
    University-of-hawaii-sea-grant-college-program
    Verna-chartrand
    Vibrant Hawai'i
    Victoria-university
    Vincent-paul-ponthieux
    Virginia-fortner
    Volcano Art Center
    Volcano Village
    Voyaging
    Waa
    Waa7c86374d5e
    Waiaka
    Waianae-mountains
    Waihou
    Waikoloa
    Waikoloa-canoe-club
    Waikoloa-dry-forest-initiative
    Waikoloa-stream
    Wailoa Center
    Waimea
    Waimea Arts Council
    Waimea-christmas
    Waimea Civic Center
    Waimea Country School
    Waimea Educational Hui
    Waimea-hawaiian-civic-club
    Waimea Middle School
    Waimea-ocean-film-festival
    Waimea School
    Waimea Yoga
    Waipi699o
    Waipio
    Waipi'o Lookout
    Waipi'o Valley
    Waipio-valley-community-circle
    Waipunalei
    Waiulaula-stream
    Wao
    Wao Akua
    Wao Kanaka
    Wao Nahele
    Warren Noll
    Water
    Watercolor
    Watercolors
    Waterworld
    Wdfi
    Weaving
    Wendi Roehrig
    Wendy-hamane
    Whales
    Wh-rickard
    Wilds-brawner
    Wiliwili
    William Miller Seymour Lindsey
    Willy-mcglouthlin
    Women699s-work
    Women-artists
    World Peace Prayer Society
    World War II
    World-wide-voyage
    Ya Mul Kim
    Ymca
    Yokohama
    Yoshiko Ekuan
    Young Hi Lee
    Yutaka Kimura
    Ywca
    Zettelyss Amora


    RSS Feed

Copyright 2021. All rights reserved. Jan Wizinowich.
  Oral History  |  Talk Stories  |  About  |  Home