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#nativehawaiian

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Today in Labor History February 25, 1843: Lord George Paulet, naval captain, occupied the Kingdom of Hawaii in the name of Great Britain. Paulet and his men controlled the islands for five months, until the U.S. sent warships to expel them. Great Britain supposedly never authorized the invasion. The Hawaiian Kingdom was a sovereign state from 1795-1883. King Kamehameha, from the island of Hawaii, created the state by conquering four other Hawaiian islands and unifying them in 1795. The U.S. acted as its “protector” during these years, preventing the UK and Japan from asserting hegemony. However, in 1898, the U.S. annexed the islands, after U.S. businessmen participated in the overthrow of the monarchy in 1893.

The Hawaiian flag, depicted here, is based on Kānāwai Māmalahoe, or Law of the Splintered Paddle, a precept in Hawaiian law, originating with King Kamehameha I in 1797. The law states "Let every elderly person, woman and child lie by the roadside in safety," (i.e., safely protected whenever there is a battle). The law is enshrined in the Hawaiian state constitution, Article 9, Section 10, and has become a model for modern human rights law regarding the treatment of civilians and other non-combatants during times of war. The law was came as a result of an incident when Kamehameha was on a military expedition in Puna and chased after a fisherman. However, Kamehameha's leg got caught in the reef. The fisherman hit him on the head with a paddle in defense, which broke into pieces, but the fisherman stopped after this and spared him his life. Kamehameha later brought the fisherman before him in judgement. Instead of ordering a death sentence on the fisherman, he ruled that the fisherman had only been protecting his land and family, and so the Law of the Splintered Paddle was declared.

Continued thread

[Short film]: Pili Ka Moʻo

Justyn Ah Chong with Malia Akutagawa (#KanakaMaoli)

"The #Fukumitsu ʻOhana (family) of #Hakipuu are #NativeHawaiian #TaroFarmers and keepers of this generational practice. While much of #Oahu has become urbanized, Hakipuʻu remains a kīpuka (oasis) of traditional knowledge where great chiefs once resided and their bones still remain. The Fukumitsus are tossed into a world of complex real estate and judicial proceedings when nearby Kualoa Ranch, a large settler-owned corporation, destroys their familial burials to make way for continued development plans."

Watch:
reciprocity.org/films/pili-ka-

#DCEFF #IndigenousStorytellers
#IndigenousFilms #ReciprocityProject
#Reciprocity #IndigenousFilmMakers #IndigenousWisdom
#RealEstate #KualoaRanch #CorporateColonialism #SettlerColonialism #NativeHawaiians #Hawaii #KingdomOfHawaii #Development #CulturalGenocide #FukumitsuOhana #ʻOhana

Reciprocity ProjectPili Ka MoʻoThe Fukumitsu ‘Ohana (family) of Hakipu’u are Native Hawaiin taro farmers. When a nearby corporation digs up the Fukumitsu’s familial burial ground to…

"More than 150 people turned out at the Kihei Community Center on Wednesday for a public scoping meeting about a proposed telescope project on the summit of #Haleakala. The testimony was overwhelmingly against the project."

civilbeat.org/2024/05/the-air-

Honolulu Civil Beat · The Air Force Wants To Build 7 New Telescopes On Maui To Track Space DebrisBy Paula Dobbyn

This month, the American Archive of Public Broadcasting commemorates Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month by honoring the rich history, culture, and perspectives of these communities.

Explore the AAPB’s extensive collection of programs dedicated to #AANHPI history and perspectives and celebrate the diversity of voices in our archive: blog.americanarchive.org/2024/

Today in Labor History November 28, 1843: The Kingdom of Hawaii was officially recognized by the United Kingdom and France as an independent nation. Consequently, the date is now known as Ka Lā Hui (Hawaiian Independence Day). The nation was formed in 1795, when the warrior chief Kamehameha the Great, of the independent island of Hawaiʻi, conquered and unified the independent islands of Oʻahu, Maui, Molokaʻi and Lānaʻi. The U.S. became its chief trading partner and “protector” to prevent other foreign powers from seizing control. In 1891, the Committee of Safety, led primarily by foreign nationals from the U.S., U.K. and Germany, and some dissident locals, overthrew Queen Liliʻuokalani. And in 1898, the U.S. annexed Hawaiʻi, making it a territory of the U.S. In 1993 Congress passed the Apology Resolution, acknowledging that the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii was by agents and citizens of the U.S. and that the Native Hawaiian people never relinquished their claims to sovereignty.

Continued thread

1893: #Hawaii

"In January 1893, a small group of white business and plantation owners, with the support of a U.S. envoy to Hawaii (Native spelling: Hawai'i), led a coup d'état that ousted the Hawaiian monarch Queen Liliʻuokalani from power. This came six years after the Queen's predecessor, her brother King David Kalakaua, was forced to sign a new constitution at gunpoint that stripped him of most of his powers and shifted them to members of the white planter class.

"The coup leaders immediately pushed for the U.S. to annex Hawaii, which it did in 1898. The islands remained a U.S. territory until 1959, when Hawaii became America's 50th state.

"In 1993, a century after the coup, the U.S. government formally apologized to Native Hawaiians for overthrowing their monarchy and annexing 1.8 million acres of land “without the consent of or compensation to the #NativeHawaiian people…or their #sovereign government.”

history.com/news/us-overthrow-

#HumanRights
#Covert
#Corporatism
#Corporatocracy
#Corruption
#Capitalism
#Colonialism

HISTORY · 10 Times America Helped Overthrow a Foreign GovernmentBy Becky Little
Replied in thread

@jeffowski Adding relevant hashtags:










Should also teach children 80-90% of Native Hawaiians died from exposure to diseases brought by Europeans between late 1700s-early 1900s. Those same diseases are now preventable by vaccines but remain a threat if vaccines are not routine (see 2019 measles outbreak in Samoa and 2023 in American Samoa).

Kaulana Nā Pua ("Famous are the flowers") is a Hawaiian patriotic song written by Eleanor Kekoaohiwaikalani Wright Prendergast in 1893 for members of the Royal Hawaiian Band who protested the overthrow of Queen Liliʻuokalani and the Hawaiian Kingdom.

The song is also known under the title of Mele ʻAi Pōhaku, the "Stone-Eating Song", or Mele Aloha ʻĀina, the "Patriot's Song".

While it's still popular in Hawaiʻi today, not many non-Hawaiian speaking listeners are aware of the song's historical significance or the profound antipathy to U.S. annexation in its lyrics.

The "government" referred to in the song is the Provisional Government of Hawaii (which was later to become the Republic of Hawaii and subsequently the territory and state), proclaimed by the conspirators upon seizing power.

Mrs. Prendergast composed the song for the Royal Hawaiian Band, who:

… had just walked out on their jobs after the bandmaster demanded they sign an oath of loyalty to the Provisional Government.

The bandmaster said they had better sign or they would be eating rocks.

The Hawaiian Renaissance has lent the song Kaulana Nā Pua renewed significance in recent years. Its words are often cited in the context of the Hawaiian sovereignty movement as an expression of opposition to U.S. rule.

#NativeHawaiian #Hawaii

youtu.be/SqHRh-F-HV8

Native Hawaiians are vastly underrepresented in STEM careers. The Paubox Kahikina STEM Scholarship is to encourage Native Hawaiians to pursue careers in STEM. The scholarship is recurring in nature. In other words, recipients receive $1,000 per year until they graduate. The deadline to apply is Wednesday, May 31st! paubox.com/blog/application-de #hawaii #hawaiian #nativehawaiian #kanaka #kanakamaoli #scholarship

www.paubox.comApplication deadline (May 31st): 2023 Paubox Kahikina STEM ScholarshipThe deadline to apply for the 2023 Paubox Kahikina STEM Scholarship is Wednesday, May 31st.

Hula performance celebrates mahu life and experiences

Māhū in Native Hawaiian and Tahitian cultures are third gender people with traditional spiritual and social roles within the culture, similar to Tongan fakaleiti and Samoan fa'afafine. Historically māhū were assigned male at birth, but in modern usage māhū can refer to a variety of genders and sexual orientations.

#LGBTQ #transgender #hula #NativeHawaiian
staradvertiser.com/2023/03/26/

Honolulu Star-AdvertiserHula performance celebrates mahu life and experiencesBy Linsey Dower

“Resentment is a sharp emotion that is triggered by a perception of unfairness, built over time.

Asian culture can influence us to stomach hard emotions like these, and the result?

Ruptured relationships between parents and children, and the cycle continues in the way we show up in our relationships.”

Doing this workshop tonight. #Asian #NativeHawaiian #PacificIslander friends, it’s free and virtual:

lu.ma/irw-7

lu.ma❤️‍🔥 In Relationship With x 💙 Asian Mental Health Project | Sharing Resentment When You're Conflict-Avoidant · Zoom · LumaNote on the session: This live session will be recorded and accessible to the facilitators, Kevin and Stephanie. They will use it to write a follow-up summary and post the recorded part of only...

The racial tensions within Hawai`i stem from oppressive colonialism, unjust self-victimization, and a myriad of other factors that may have led up to this event. Furthermore, this only makes POC and BIPOC look racially stereotypical in the public eye, and that's something we DON'T want in today's bigoted climate.

#racialjustice #racism #hawaii #hawaiian #nativehawaiian #hate #crime #hatecrime #ethnicity #civilrights #civilrightsarehumanrights #poc #bipoc #aapi
nbcnews.com/news/asian-america

NBC NewsSentencing of two Hawaiian Native men highlights the state's complicated racial dynamicsBy Associated Press

White people who move to Hawaii are “not used to thinking about whiteness”—Two Native Hawaiian men are scheduled to be sentenced for federal hate crime convictions in the brutal beating of a white man who tried to move into their remote, traditional fishing village on Maui. usnews.com/news/best-states/ha #hawaii #hawaiimastodon #hawaiian #nativehawaiian #maui #race #racerelations