This blog is about Hawaii's status as an independent country under prolonged illegal occupation by the United States, and the history, culture, law & politics of the islands.

By Scott Crawford, Hana, Maui

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Bill to remove portraits of Prov. Gov. Officials

URGING THAT PORTRAITS OF OFFICIALS OF THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF HAWAI`I BE REMOVED FROM DISPLAY IN POSITIONS OF HONOR IN STATE GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS.

http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2010/bills/HCR8_.pdf

Introduced by House Speaker Rep. Calvin Say

Update: (apparently initiated by OHA (Clyde Namuo))

Akaka Bill: Hear Both Sides @ MCC

There’s actually more than just 2 sides even, but discussion is good, information is good, bring it out and let people make up their own minds.

Mālama Hāloa

From: Kalei (Tsuha) Nuuhiwa
Sent: Thu, February 4, 2010 12:31:50 PM
Subject: Malama Haloa

MĀLAMA HĀLOA encourages opportunities for our community to become more familiar with traditional and modern ways of caring for Hāloa. The 4-day event will include presentations by respected practitioners who will share intimate knowledge of their practice. Topics include:

Rare Plant Preservation by Nellie Sugii
Wednesday, March 31, 2010 – 1:30 pm
Lyon Arboretum – meet at the gift shop

Kau Ka Mahina by Kalei Nu‘uhiwa
Thursday, April 1, 2010 – 10:30 am
UH Mānoa Kamakūokalani – Hālau

Kalo Varieties and Current Issues by Jerry Konanui
Friday, April 2, 2010 – 10:30 am
UH Mānoa Ka Papa Lo‘i ‘O Kānewai

Ka Papa Lo‘i ‘o Kānewai (1st Saturday)
April 3, 2010 – 8:15 am

On the final day of Mālama Hāloa, attendees will be able to work with the staff and practitioners at Ka Papa Lo‘i ‘o Kānewai. This and other 1st Saturdays are open to the community to experience traditional farming methods, converse with Hawaiian speakers, ku‘i ‘ai and ku‘i imu. It is a day for family and friends to enjoy. Light morning refreshments are provided. All are welcome to contribute and share in the potluck at the end of the workday.

Special Mahalo to: Ho‘okulāiwi, Lyon Arboretum, Hawai‘inuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge, and the UH Mānoa SAPFB. If you would like more information, please contact Makahiapo Cashman at kanewai @ hawaii.edu

MALAMA HALOA FLYER (pdf)

Akaka Bill on TV tonight

Mark Bennett, Walter Heen, Jon Osorio talk about the Akaka Bill on PBS Thursday, Feb 4th at 7:30pm

Promo for 'The Hawaiian State of Mind'

Via Kūhio Vogeler’s blog, a promo for “The Hawaiian State of Mind”

The Hawaiian State of Mind
Tuesdays @ 1:00 pm
2nd & 4th Saturdays @ 9:00 pm
NATV 53

Mahalo to John Kuamo‘o for putting together this promo on “The Hawaiian State of Mind” and for all his kokua on the show. Mahalo also to Pono Kealoha, Lynette Cruz, Evern Williams, Tom Hackett, Dane Neves, and everyone at the Pālolo Community Media Center for all their kōkua. This show has come together because of everyone’s hard work.

International Jury Honors 'Noho Hewa' for Being 'Militant and Uncompromising'

MEDIA RELEASE

HAWAI‘I FILM RECEIVES SPECIAL JURY PRIZE AT TAHITI FILM FESTIVAL
International Jury Honors “Noho Hewa” for Being “Militant and Uncompromising”

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Saturday, January 30, 2010

MEDIA CONTACT:
Ana Currie, Pasifika Foundation Hawai‘i
e-mail: acurrie @ hawaii.rr.com

PAPEETE, TAHITI – Hawaiian filmmaker Anne Keala Kelly’s newly released documentary “Noho Hewa: The Wrongful Occupation of Hawai‘i” was awarded a special jury prize at this week’s Festival International Du Film Documentaire Oceanien (FIFO) in Tahiti.

The packed Grand Theatre at Papeete’s Maison de la Culture exploded into loud cheers, hoots and applause when the special jury prize for Noho Hewa: The Wrongful Occupation of Hawai‘i was announced last night at the closing event of the Festival International Du Film Documentaire Oceanien (FIFO) in Tahiti.

Jurors were moved by its raw and passionate portrayal of the struggles of today’s native Hawaiians.

Noho Hewa had attracted considerable attention among the professional and community viewers for its edgy and explicit expression of the ongoing effects of colonialism in Hawai‘i. For many Tahitian and other visiting Pacific island viewers, Kelly’s film enabled them to understand, for the first time, the realities faced by the Hawaiian people in their own homeland, and the kanaka Maoli (native Hawaiian) resistance to the desecration and obliteration of their culture by the US military, real estate development, and tourism pressures.

Continue reading International Jury Honors ‘Noho Hewa’

New Course: Protest under Occupation

From: “Kuhio Vogeler” <kuhio.vogeler @ gmail.com>
Subject: New Course: Protest under Occupation

Aloha Kakou,

Attached is a syllabus for a new course during the first summer session at UH Mānoa:

PACE 485
Topics in Peace and Conflict Resolution:

Protest under Occupation
Instructor: Kūhiō Vogeler
Summer 2010 (First Session)
Room: To Be Announced
Monday-Friday 9:00-10:15am

The room number and other information will be announced at a later date.

Mahalo,
Kuhio


Kuhio Vogeler
Ph.D., Political Science
1711 East-West Rd. #774
Honolulu, Hawai’i 96848-1711

Pro Bowl moved to United States?

You know sometimes these references come in the most random places, but I always find it amusing and telling when people talk about Hawaii as a foreign country. I’m a big football fan and sometimes listen to football podcasts, and happened to stumble across this… On today’s ESPN’s Football Today Podcast Jeremy Green is interviewing former Packers WR Antonio Freeman about the NFL Pro Bowl, and he says this:

“…now when I look at the NFL, and them bringing the Pro Bowl to the United States, to Miami… it’s good in some ways, we bring some of the money back to the NFL, back to the states.”

So, Antonio Freeman, who came to Hawaii as part of the Pro Bowl, thinks that Hawaii is not part of the United States, is not a state lol. He’s right, of course. But it just goes to show you how common the perception is of Hawaii as a foreign country, even among people who have no real awareness of Hawaii’s history or independence movement. It happens more often than you might think.

Akaka faces new challenges in Senate

Star-Bulletin article considers the effect of the loss of Democrat’s supermajority in the Senate on the fate of the Akaka bill:

Although its author expresses optimism that the Akaka Bill will pass this year, the loss of the Democrats’ supermajority in the Senate and last-minute changes to the bill that fueled objections in Hawaii may pose significant hurdles during this ninth try.
[…]
House approval, achieved twice before, again is expected.

The difficulty remains in the Senate, which, already bogged down in health care, energy and fiscal legislation, now is reacting to the special election in Massachusetts, in which a Republican railing against big government, back-room dealing and special interests won the seat held for decades by liberal lion Edward Kennedy.

Before Kennedy’s death and Brown’s election, the Akaka Bill enjoyed the support of all 60 Senate Democrats and Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. So Akaka’s office insists it should still have the necessary 60 votes, even without Brown.

His vote may not be essential, but Brown’s election has drastically changed the climate in Washington. Democrats facing midterm elections are running scared, once beleaguered Republicans are feeling newly powerful, and any legislation lacking bipartisan support is suddenly a much tougher sell.

It’s hard to imagine that the Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization Act will be a high priority outside the Hawaii delegation in such a topsy-turvy political environment, and the lack of transparency surrounding the late changes in the Senate version may come to haunt its author.

Hoʻokahi Lahui Hawaii ‘HEAR US ROAR’