12/21/2003
State of OHA address
State of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs
Address
by Trustee Haunani Apoliona
Chairperson, Board of
Trustees
Kawaiahao Church
Wednesday, December 17, 2003
10:00 a.m.
On Dec. 17, OHA Chairperson Haunani Apoliona delivered the
first-ever State of OHA address at Kawaiahao Church. As part of a
service conducted by the Rev. Kaleo Patterson, Apoliona addressed
an audience of community leaders, including Reps. Neil Abercombie
and Ed Case, Department of Hawaiian Home Lands Director Micah Kane,
and members of a broad range of Hawaiian organizations and
benevolent societies.
Speaking at the
close of what has been a very eventful year for OHA and the
Hawaiian community at large, Apoliona covered the many strides that
have been made, and the challenges that have had to be faced, in
2003--particularly on the issues of federal recognition and
Hawaiian governance. She also laid out the agency’s goals and
commitments as it moves forward into a new and even more critical
year.
What follows is the full version of the Chairperson’s
address, a text of which was distributed to the audience at the
service. In the interest of time, Apoliona summarized some portions
of this text in her actual spoken address.
I. Greeting & introduction
E na ‘oiwi ‘olino mai Hawai‘i a Ni‘ihau
a puni ke ao malamalama, na hulu kupuna, na lei makua a me na maka
‘opiopio, aloha pumehana kakou. ‘Oiai e ku nei kakou ma
ka palena lihilihi o keia makahiki, he wa kupono keia e huli a e
ho‘omana‘o aku ai i na hana a me na mea maika‘i
he nui i loa‘a mai ia kakou, ke kaiaulu Hawai‘i. No ke
ke‘ena kuleana Hawai‘i, he makahiki keia i piha pu
‘ia me na hana ko‘iko‘i a me na hanana like
‘ole.
To you, the Native Hawaiians who seek wisdom and value knowledge
and education, from Hawaii to Niihau and throughout this brilliant
world – to our beloved elders, our respected parents and
bright-eyed youth, a warm aloha to you all.
As we stand here at the fringe of 2003, it is a fitting time to
turn back and reflect on the many endeavors of the year and recount
the many good things as well as the challenges we faced head on.
For the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, this has been a year of
daunting tasks as well as a myriad of productive activities.
Today, OHA initiates a different way to communicate with our
beneficiaries and the general public. On behalf of the OHA Board of
Trustees, administrator, our staff and hundreds of volunteers, I am
pleased to present this message to the community.
Similar to the governor’s "State of the State" and the
president’s "State of the Union" messages, we will highlight
what has been accomplished in the past year, not just by OHA, but
by the Hawaiian community as a whole, which will necessarily
include many other Hawaiian organizations and political groups who
advocate for the Hawaiian people. We will talk about where
Hawaiians stand today and where we, as a group, need to go. With
that said, today, we have much to report.
II. Defense of Hawaiian rights
A. Legal attacks
In the past year, we witnessed attacks on Native Hawaiian rights
like no other period since the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy
over one hundred years ago. At no other time have Hawaiians faced
attempts to dismantle the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, the
Kamehameha Schools, the Queen Liliuokalani Trust, and the Office of
Hawaiian Affairs.
These legal attacks were not just against OHA, they were
broad-based. In the Arakaki v. Lingle case, sixteen
plaintiffs seek to stop all public funds to OHA and to eventually
take back the 200,000 acres of land held by the Department of
Hawaiian Home Lands. In the Doe v. Kamehameha Schools and
Mohica-Cummings v. Kamehameha Schools cases, plaintiffs have
sought to force Kamehameha to admit non-Hawaiian children,
destroying the intent of founder Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop and
the hopes of the Hawaiian community.
At the Honolulu City Council level, the Queen Liliuokalani Trust
was being forced to sell its fee simple interest in the foster
tower condominium, property whose income affects the lives of over
9,000 children. Kamehameha Schools suffered the impact of forced
sale of its Kahala property.
These attacks were alarming to the Native Hawaiian community. At
the core, institutions that helped define us as a people,
institutions important to our sense of well-being, institutions
that serve Hawaiian ohana were in danger of being shut down or
redefined by others.
It is clear the long-term goal of most of the proponents of
these lawsuits and legislative actions is to dismantle all
rights Hawaiians had worked for many years to obtain. These attacks
are made under the guise of innocent sounding names like "Color
Blind America", "Aloha for All" and other euphemisms.
Fundamentally, these attacks reinforce the need for Hawaiians to be
alert, to react responsibly and to assert our rights for
survival.
B. Response
1. Reactive response
Let me recount the ways that OHA, DHHL and other Hawaiian
organizations and individuals have responded to lawsuits and
asserted " judicial resolve" and "political activism" during this
year.
We have challenged the lawsuits by putting in place legal teams
to defend the right of Hawaiians to benefit from the Office of
Hawaiian Affairs, an entity established by our state Constitution,
to defend through DHHL, established by federal law and State
Constitution, the right for Hawaiians to benefit from homestead
leases and the right to pass such leases to children and heirs.
Since the dawn of this year, OHA has engaged in
"political activism". In January, we organized a rally with over
one thousand Hawaiians, with kamaaina and malihini, who marched at
the state capitol on opening day of the state Legislature.
Participants included the University of Hawaii center for Hawaiian
Studies, several Hawaiian charter schools, Hawaiian benevolent
societies, the Ilioulaokalani Coalition, the State Council for
Hawaiian Homestead Associations (SCHHA), Hui Kakoo, the Native
Hawaiian Legal Corporation, the Association of Hawaiian Civic Clubs
and many other organizations.
In February, OHA established a Washington, D.C.,
Bureau, in the United States capitol, which is staffed by longtime
OHA employee Martha Ross. This office consistently provides
Congress and the administration information on issues important to
Native Hawaiians and continues to gather support for Native
Hawaiians from American Indian tribes, Alaska Native villages, and
minority and human and civil rights organizations.
Later in February, OHA joined the Queen Liliuokalani Trust and
hundreds in our community to oppose the city’s attempt to
force a lease conversion of the Foster Tower condominium. OHA
submitted testimony in opposition to the bill and provided mea ai
(food) for those who labored to support the trust.
At the state Legislature, OHA argued against last-minute House
finance draft changes to SB 1151, which would have severely
restricted the amount of revenue OHA would obtain from ceded lands.
Hundreds of written testimony in opposition poured into the
committee hearing and voices were raised to protest this proposed
move.
Also in February, OHA trustees joined governor
Linda Lingle in Washington, D.C., to testify at the introduction of
the Akaka-Stevens Bill in the senate and encourage its passage.
Clearly the senate co-sponsorship support is growing as it is
currently the Akaka-Stevens-Reid-Inouye-Hatch-Smith Bill.
In June, OHA trustees and staff traveled to
Arizona to propose passage of a 2003 resolution in support of
federal recognition by the National Congress of American Indians,
the oldest and largest American Indian and Alaska Native
organization, representing over 250 member tribes. Trustees also
sought support from individual tribes, Arizona leaders and Hawaiian
organizations while in Arizona. One of our most formidable
opponents to federal recognition has been Arizona Senator Jon
Kyl.
In August, OHA and our volunteers gathered more
than 25,000 letters in support of federal recognition. 10,000 of
the letters were faxed starting at midnight in order to arrive in
Washington, D.C., in the offices of congressional members on
September 2, Queen Liliuokalani’s birthday. The original
copies of the letters were hand-delivered in Washington, D.C., to
congressional offices by volunteers from Hawaiian organizations in
the D.C./Virginia/Maryland Tri-state area.
In September, members of the Hawaiian benevolent
societies walked the halls of Congress in full regalia to talk with
senators about the Hawaiian recognition bill. The society leaders
who traveled to Washington, D.C., represented the Royal Order of
Kamehameha, Ahahui Kaahumanu, Hale o Na Alii o Hawaii and
Mamakakaua (Daughters & Sons of Hawaiian Warriors).
A week later, OHA joined with the Kamehameha
Schools, the Ilioulaokalani Coalition, charter schools, alii
trusts, commissioners and state legislators in the Ku i ka Pono
march down Kalakaua Avenue. Over eight thousand Hawaiians, kamaaina
and malihini, marched through Waikiki in red shirts, and at the
head of the march were Governor Linda Lingle and Lt. Governor Duke
Aiona. At the conclusion of the march in Kapiolani Park, we
gathered for a day of family and education, Hooulu Lahui Aloha no
na Keiki.
By September, the appeals for support from
Indian tribes and other organizations brought in a flood of letters
and resolutions in support of federal recognition for Native
Hawaiians. In addition to the National Congress of American Indians
(NCAI), we received resolutions or letters of support from the
Alaska Federation of Natives (AFN), the Governors Interstate
Indian Council, and the National Indian Education Association.
In October OHA representation attended the
annual meeting of Alaska Natives in anchorage and OHA’s Board
of Trustees transmitted its resolution of recognition and mahalo to
the board of AFN.
In November, trustees traveled to New Mexico to
support the National Congress of American Indians and to extend the
reach for continuing support of Native Hawaiian recognition.
OHA’s Board of Trustees also transmitted a resolution of
recognition and mahalo to the board of NCAI.
By November, we had also received support for
federal recognition for Native Hawaiians from 17 national and
regional organizations, including: the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Japanese American
Citizens League (national), The National Organization of Pacific
Islanders in America, the National Asian Pacific Legal Consortium,
the League of United Latin American Citizens, the Organization of
Chinese Americans and the Leadership Conference on Civil
rights.
Federal recognition is supported by our entire congressional
delegation (Sen. Inouye, Sen. Akaka, Rep. Abercrombie, and Rep.
Case); Eni Faleomavaega, the congressional delegate from American
Samoa; Howard Dean, Democratic candidate for president; and
recent Republican co-sponsors Senators Orrin Hatch and
Gordon Smith.
The message OHA and the Hawaiian community have sent is:
"Hawaiians intend to stand up to all challenges and legal attacks
on Native Hawaiian rights, trusts, and self-determination. We will
mobilize and respond."
2. Proactive response
This year, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs tried to broaden
awareness of issues facing the Hawaiian community by reaching out
to different sectors of our local community. In addition to
educational outreach, our goal was to engage in discussion and
continuing dialogue.
To that end, we held five community meetings in Waialua,
Waimanalo, central Honolulu, Hilo, and Kona. In addition we held
more than 60 halawai, small gatherings for groups like civic clubs,
neighborhood boards, Rotary clubs, business organizations, college
classes, social service agencies and individual ohana, reaching
more than 2,000 people in small, talk-story sessions on all six
major islands.
Our outreach also extended to Hawaiians in other
states. Out of the 401,000 Hawaiians identified in the 2000 U.S.
Census, 162,000 live in other states. That is 40 percent of the
Native Hawaiian population. More than half of these Hawaiians,
88,000, live in the western states. To reach these Hawaiians, OHA
went, in August to E Hula Mau in Long Beach, California; to the Las
Vegas Hoolaulea in September; and to Ia Oe e ka La in northern
California in October. At these events, we connected with several
hundred Hawaiians and got them signed on to the Hawaiian Registry,
and obtained another thousand letters in support of federal
recognition.
In November, halawai were conducted in both
Arizona and Florida on Hawaiian governance and federal recognition.
OHA also did outreach on the East Coast: In march, OHA partnered
with the National Congress of American Indians and the Alaska
Federation of Natives, along with the Council for Native Hawaiian
Advancement (CNHA), in a "best practices" indigenous forum held in
Washington, D.C.; in June, OHA participated in the Hawaii State
Society Kamehameha lei draping ceremony and annual Hawaii State
Society luau in Washington; in September, OHA held three halawai in
the D.C. Tri-state area; in November, with the active support of
Hawaiian educators present, OHA obtained a resolution in support of
federal recognition from the National Indian Education Association
meeting in North Carolina, which was attended by several Hawaiian
educators and 2,300 Native American educators.
OHA’s position has never been that federal recognition is
the only option for Native Hawaiians. To that end, this year, OHA
supported various independence-oriented groups, including the
Living Nation, by helping to fund their event in January and the
Nation of Hawaii in Waimanalo, by providing mea ai (food) for an
event in January. These groups are strong supporters of
independence.
And OHA has also assisted: the Native Hawaiian Convention, in
August, by sponsoring the cost of their neighbor island and moku
kamaaina (U.S. Continent) delegates to attend the general
assembly meeting in Honolulu. This group is examining two models of
governance, integration and independence.
In addition, OHA sponsored three round-table discussions filmed
by olelo on alternatives to federal recognition and options
available to Native Hawaiians under international law. OHA also
invited all sovereignty groups to participate in the Hooulu Lahui
Aloha no na Keiki day at Kapiolani Park in September. Six groups
took advantage of the opportunity to share their message with the
several thousand Hawaiians who joined us that day: Living nation,
Native Hawaiian Convention, Imua, KAHEA, Ka Lahui and Reinstated
Hawaiian Government.
In June, OHA commissioned a survey by Ward
Research to find out exactly what the Hawaiian community wants as
to federal recognition and whether there is support among
non-Hawaiians for federal recognition. More than 600 people were
interviewed, and we learned that 86% of Hawaiians and 78% of
non-Hawaiians support federal recognition. This showed resounding
support for federal recognition.
In order to educate the community on Hawaiian issues, OHA hosted
a panel to address Hawaiian governance at the 2nd annual Native
Hawaiian Conference, organized by the Council for Native Hawaiian
Advancement. OHA also reactivated the website: NativeHawaiians.com to
hold articles and commentary on federal recognition and how it
could impact Hawaiians and non-Hawaiians, and commissioned a
videotape, "Hooulu Lahui Aloha" on Hawaiian history, which was
produced by Waianae High School’s Searider Productions.
To further community awareness, OHA sponsored a
debate on federal recognition at the East-West Center in August.
Arguing on the side in favor of federal recognition were former
state Supreme Court Justice Robert Klein, now counsel to
OHA’s Board of Trustees, and retired judge and OHA Trustee
Boyd P. Mossman. Arguing against federal recognition were attorney
and long-time activist Poka Laenui and UH Center for Hawaiian
Studies professor Jon Osorio.
In October, the video "Hooulu Lahui Aloha,"
produced by the Waianae High School Seariders was shown during
primetime television on KHON Channel 2. Following the videotape, a
panel including the executive director of the Native Hawaiian Legal
Corporation, Mahealani Kamauu; attorney Bill Meheula, who is
litigating the OHA v. State ceded land case; and myself
invited viewers to call in with their questions and comments. We
received more than 200 calls and responded to more than 50
questions.
Later in October, OHA extended the message of self-determination
to kupuna by hosting a kupuna Sunday lunch at Washington Place.
Several trustees spoke that day, explaining the legal and political
challenges Hawaiians now face.
To start to identify and encourage potential
leaders of the new Hawaiian nation, OHA sponsored its first
leadership summit in November at Waimea Falls Park. The goal was to
get potential leaders to begin talking about how a nation is formed
and what a government would look like. Participants also discussed
qualities that sound leadership for the nation should possess.
Current sovereignty leaders attended, including Bumpy Kanahele,
Soli Niheu, Hooipo Pa, Charles Rose and Palikapu Dedman.
To further broaden awareness of the issues, OHA reached out to
keiki through its 2nd annual Na Oiwi Olino poster, essay, and
debate competition held earlier this month. Seventeen schools and
more than 250 students participated by drawing posters, writing
essays and debating federal recognition. They drew and wrote about
how the Hawaiian value "malama kekahi i kekahi" would be
exemplified by leaders of a Hawaiian nation. The goal with this
annual Na Oiwi Olino competition is to keep our opio and keiki
constantly aware of the most current issues in Hawaiian governance.
As our future leaders, they need to know what issues face the
community and the nation that they will one day lead. The winners
of the poster, essay and photo essay contests will become a part of
the OHA 2004 calendar which will be distributed to state
legislators and all members of Congress.
Throughout the year, OHA has been filming roundtable discussions
on Olelo to be aired at a future date. Twelve one-hour sessions
have been filmed, covering topics such as the history of the
Hawaiian sovereignty issue, alternatives to federal recognition,
ceded lands, international law, the Department of Hawaiian Home
Lands, and Ke Au Hou, a new youth group who have already recruited
1,000 opio to help bring awareness of these issues to other
opio.
These are the proactive things OHA did in 2003 to bring
awareness to the community and garner support for Hawaiian issues.
Through these activities, we sought to bring more people into the
hale, so to speak, including widely disparate groups, so that, as a
people, we Native Hawaiians can focus on our common vision and move
forward as one wherever possible.
C. Future
In terms of the legal attacks, and our reactive and proactive
responses, our work is not done. For the future, we must exercise
"political activism" and not just save it for election time. As a
people, we need to recognize that rights we once thought were safe
are at risk. We can no longer assume that issues we thought were
resolved are out of harm’s way.
III. OHA’s role in the movement for
self-determination
Much of this report, including OHA’s activities in support
of federal recognition, brings to the forefront the question, "what
is OHA’s role in the movement for Hawaiian
self-determination?" We know this is a matter of contention among
Hawaiian leaders who strongly support independence.
Today is an excellent time for me to clarify OHA’s
position. OHA’s decision to support federal recognition is
driven by our desire to protect Native Hawaiian rights, to protect
200,000 acres held by the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, to
protect approximately $325 million in OHA assets, to protect the
right for the alii trusts to hold land in leasehold interest, to
protect the right to admit only Hawaiian students to the Kamehameha
Schools and to protect Native Hawaiian entitlement programs.
The Board of Trustees views federal recognition as one option
available to Native Hawaiians. As part of its fiduciary duty to
ensure options are open to beneficiaries, OHA trustees do support
the passage of federal recognition. In the process of
self-determination, the aha (constitutional convention) that is
eventually convened to guide the Hawaiian nation can choose to
continue down that road or any other road. It is not for nine
trustees to decide. Also, it is not for OHA to preclude any options
at this point in time.
We at OHA know that federal recognition is not the end all, be
all. We know there are potential pitfalls and problems. We also
know that we as a people can better allay problems if we work
together, if we kukakuka and collaborate on how best to move
forward as a people.
Our vision is that OHA is a transition entity and someday will
go away. Contrary to statements made in the community and on the
internet, OHA trustees did not support federal recognition for
self-preservation of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. Federal
recognition is being supported for preservation of the assets for
the Hawaiian people. After an aha is formed, pursuant to the
procedures laid out in the Akaka-Stevens Bill, the aha may decide
that some other kind of governing entity is desired. It may be an
entity completely unaffiliated with the State of Hawaii government
structure. It may have a different name. It may have a different
structure for leadership. That is for the Hawaiian people to
decide, upon recommendations from the delegates that they elect to
the aha.
It is our position at OHA that it is the majority of the
Hawaiian people who should decide whether risking these Hawaiian
rights is more important than seeking federal recognition. As
trustees, we are obligated to keep the option open for all Hawaiian
people. We are obligated to give the majority an opportunity to be
heard through their participation in the aha and through their
voting voice.
It is important to note that there is some urgency. Without
federal recognition, there is heightened risk of Hawaiian rights
being eroded, one by one, by public policy or through the courts.
The fight is not over. The plaintiff in Doe v. Kamehameha
Schools intends to appeal. New plaintiffs may be readying their
legal briefs as we speak. These attacks will continue until, once
and for all, we can establish that Hawaiians are not just a racial
minority, but that we are a group with a unique political status
that entitles us to a considerable amount of autonomy. We need to
be prepared for the continuing fight because any chipping away at
one Hawaiian right threatens all Hawaiian rights.
To re-address the question: OHA’s role in Hawaiian
self-determination is to give all Hawaiians an opportunity to
participate in the discussion and decision, as a group, as to what
our political status and future should be.
IV. OHA’s role in the "betterment of conditions of
Hawaiians"
When the Office of Hawaiian Affairs was created in 1978, it was
tasked with the responsibility for the betterment of conditions of
native and Hawaiians. It takes significant funds and resources to
address this outcome.
This year the Board of Trustees worked on two ways to increase
its financial base. The first was to secure undisputed ceded lands
revenues. The second way was to increase OHA’s investment
portfolio. In the areas of ceded lands revenues:
On January 16, 2003, the board authorized creation of an Ad Hoc
Comiittee on Resolving Issues Related to the Public Land
Trust. The purpose of this committee was to review available
information, facts and law and outline a strategy for negotiations
with the state.
In February 2003, Governor Lingle resumed
payment of the undisputed ceded land revenues to the Office of
Hawaiian Affairs, payments that had been terminated by Governor
Cayetano. On April 23, 2003, Governor Lingle signed HB 1307, HD 1,
SD 1, which provided for payment of past-due undisputed ceded land
revenues due to OHA but stopped by Governor Cayetano. These past
due amounts were codified in legislation passed by the state
Legislature and signed into law by the governor.
On July 16, 2003, the board authorized creation of a four-member
negotiating team for resolving outstanding issues relating to
trust. In addition, the board authorized hiring experts to assist
with preparation for and during negotiations with the state.
On July 21, 2003, OHA filed a complaint at the First Circuit
Court, naming the State of Hawaii as defendant in the case. This
action was necessary to protect OHA’s claim to a primary
source of funds for Hawaiian programs. OHA contends that in
1997-1998, the state failed to perform its fiduciary duties as
trustees of the ceded lands trust. We filed this lawsuit due to an
approaching deadline on the statue of limitations.
On December 1, 2003, OHA provided a comprehensive history of act
304 to members of the state House of representatives. OHA has
expended resources and significant efforts to ensure OHA is ready
to address this important matter.
In increasing OHA’s investment portfolio, the OHA Board of
Trustees changed the process to a "manager of managers" investment
approach in March. Under this approach, the Native Hawaiian Trust
fund grew in market value by 22 percent. Both of the fund managers,
Frank Russell and Goldman Sachs, were provided $125 million each to
invest. By the end of October, they had increased the portfolio by
more than $58 million in seven months.
With the intent of betterment of conditions of Hawaiians, OHA
sought to make funds available to community organizations and
others working to help Native Hawaiians. This year, OHA provided
more than $700,000 in matching funds to Alu Like, Inc., a Hawaiian
services agency that has assisted over 100,000 Hawaiians in the
areas of employment and job placement, early education, individual
development, account and financial literacy programs, Native
Hawaiian library, at-risk youth intervention programs and kupuna
(elderly) services. Alu Like has earned national recognition in
employment and job placement, fisheries observers training programs
and the Native Hawaiian Science and Techonology Project in
collaboration the Lawrence Livermore Laboratories of California, as
well as been successful at re-entry of ex-offenders as successful
contributing members of the community in Hawaii.
OHA also helped fund:
● The Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation (NHLC), a
non-profit law firm that assists Hawaiians in preserving their
kuleana and other ohana lands and water rights. This year, NHLC won
a major victory for water rights in East Maui and for site
protection at Hokulia on the big island.
● Na Pua Noeau, a program that provides educational
opportunities to gifted and talented children.
● The Native Hawaiian diet, a cultural diet aimed at
preventing or eliminating obesity and life-threatening diseases
among Hawaiians, such as diabetes, cancer, and heart disease.
In addition, OHA approved several million dollars in grants to
community organizations. In the area of education, OHA allotted
more than $1 million in grants, including:
● $200,000 to the Niihau School of Kekaha;
● $1.5 million to Na Leo Pulama o Maui, Inc. for its
Hawaiian language immersion preschool and family language and
resource community center;
● $60,000 to the Hawaiian charter school alliance to track
improvement of students in Hawaiian charter schools;
● $500,000 to the D.O.E. to assist with Hawaiian language
immersion program;
● $61,000 to the university of Hawaii at hilo for their
master’s degree program; and
● $305,000 to the University of Hawaii at Manoa
Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies, for the development of
courses and the inventory of ceded lands.
In the area of housing, the Board of Trustees approved:
● $1.5 million to guarantee Fanniemae loans to Native
Hawaiians through First Hawaiian Bank and the Bank of Hawaii;
● More than $50,000 for home ownership and home counseling
workshops conducted by three non-profit agencies; and
● Approximately $1.6 million for reinstatement of the
homesteader loan program to help homesteaders with down payments,
repairs, and new home loans.
In the area of health and human services, OHA:
● Expanded Sage Plus, a program to help kupuna apply for
medicare and medicaid;
● Convened the Native Hawaiian Health Task Force to help
formulate a health and human services plan for Native
Hawaiians.
In the area of cultural preservation and native rights, OHA
worked with our partner the Native Hawaiian Historic Preservation
Council and:
● Reviewed more than 400 environmental assessments and
environmental impact statements;
● Held the 2nd annual Ke Kuleana Pili ka Piko conference,
attended by more than 200 practitioners;
● Joined with Hui Malama I Na Kupuna o Hawaii Nei and the
Oahu Island Burial Council to secure the repatriation of two iwi
poo from the American Museum of Natural History;
● Succeeded in retrieving nine items from Peabody Essex
Museum for repatriation to Kanupa cave;
● Allocated $500,000 to the Audubon Society to support
cultural preservation and education in Waimea Valley;
● Filed and won a lawsuit against NASA for failure to
conduct a full impact study for its telescope development on Mauna
Kea. The judge agreed that NASA’s Environmental Assessment
was inadequate.
Over the past year, OHA received several letters from Native
Hawaiian inmates in Arizona and Oklahoma who were not being allowed
to practice their religion and culture. We are proud to report that
the Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation was successful in getting the
Department of Public Safety to allow Native Hawaiian inmates to
recognize the makahiki season as a critical tenet of their
spiritual needs as Native Hawaiians. The Native Hawaiian Legal
Corporation will continue to work toward a uniform and consistent
policy that affords inmates the full panoply of religious rights
enjoyed by inmates of more established faiths.
OHA maintains its commission membership on the Kahoolawe Island
reserve commission and participated in ceremonies marking the
return of Kahoolawe to the state, 62 years after the U.S.
Government first took the island for use as a military target.
In the area of economic development, OHA:
● Made eight business loans to Hawaiian business, totaling
more than $300,000 and creating or sustaining 28 jobs;
● Allotted several small community-based economic
development projects for activities such as taro production and
fin-fish hatching; and
● Approved $500,000 for a micro-loan program. Under this
program, Native Hawaiians undergoing a financial hardship can
borrow up to $7,500 for emergencies such as funeral expenses,
mortgage payments, auto repairs or emergency medical care.
In addition, OHA keeps informed on issues of concern through its
participation on several boards, including:
● Papa Ola Lokahi,
● Legislative hanai advisory task force,
● Department of Hawaiian Home Lands Kauai Island Plan
Working Group,
● CBED Statewide Advisory Council,
● Native Hawaiian Education Council,
● Pihana na Mamo Advisory Council for Special Education,
and
● Hui Imi Advisory Council
This listing is just a sampling of the many
projects that OHA has supported and helped to fund this year. To
continue this flow of funds into the community, the Board of
Trustees in September approved an annual set-aside of at least 10
percent of the annual budget to grants and programs. Based on
OHA’s current budget, this amounts to roughly $1.7 million of
grant funds that will go out into the community, for new assistance
each year. This does not include the more than $5 million in
existing programs for which OHA matches funds or runs directly
in-house.
OHA is also implementing steps to better monitor grants and
evaluate them as to impact on the community. We will continue to
seek collaboration with community groups and assist them with
capacity building.
V. OHA and the community
A. Relations with the community
We know OHA’s relationship with the Hawaiian community
has, at times, been troublesome. There has been a feeling in the
community that OHA has not heard or responded to the Hawaiian
community’s needs. This is not the kind of relationship OHA
wants to have with the community.
We hope that by doing things differently in recent years, we
have been more responsive to the community and those critical
feelings have begun to change.
B. Apology and request for forgiveness
If we, as an office, have fallen short in our attempts to
respond to our community, if we have hurt people in the process,
and if we have failed as an office to rise to our mission, we
apologize. We know OHA can do better.
We ask for your forgiveness to mihi, kala and oki. So that we,
the Hawaiian people, can move forward unified in our search to find
the right path for our people.
We want today to mark a turning point in OHA’s
relationship with the Hawaiian community. We ask that the Hawaiian
community place its faith in OHA to meet its mission to "better the
conditions of native Hawaiians and Hawaiians."
C. Renewal and recommitment
We, the trustees, intend to demonstrate that OHA is worthy of
your trust and recommitment. We hope you have seen changes at OHA
in recent years, and we commit to you to continue to improve
OHA’s outreach and response to the Native Hawaiian
community.
We invite the Hawaiian and non-Hawaiian community to join us in
this renewal, keeping in mind the vision of the constitutional
convention in 1978 when delegates created the Office of Hawaiian
Affairs and all voters of the state ratified the constitutional
amendment that established OHA.
VI. Moving forward
So where do we go from here?
It is our hope at the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, that we, as
Hawaiians, can stand together against the legal attacks. We intend
to stand together as we look for the right path to
self-determination, and we invite all Hawaiians into the hale to
discuss, deliberate and decide. As the decisions are made, we will
not forget the many non-Hawaiians who now make Hawaii home and are
members of our ohana.
Regardless of whether the Akaka-Stevens Bill passes, and we
believe it will, the time is now for Native Hawaiians to begin the
enrollment process. This is a process whereby all Hawaiians,
wherever they may be, in Hawaii or away from our shores, whether
incarcerated or living in another country, will have the
opportunity to stand up and say "I am Hawaiian" and "I want to be
part of the decision-making process." Those who enroll would be
notified of the convening of an aha, a constitutional convention.
They can choose to run as a delegate, and they will vote for
delegates.
Once the delegates are elected, the aha will convene. It is the
aha that will deliberate on what the political future of Native
Hawaiians will be. The aha will recommend the path for
self-determination.
The recommendations of the aha will then be put to the Hawaiian
people for ratification. Hawaiians can vote for or against the
proposal that the aha puts forth.
Although OHA is funding the enrollment, OHA can not be the sole
sponsor or promoter of the enrollment. A coalition of many Hawaiian
groups, including the civic clubs, the homestead associations,
halau, ohana in and outside Hawaii, traditional practitioners,
Hawaiian societies and kupuna organizations, must help to enroll
Hawaiians. The enrollment information may likely be held by a
neutral entity yet to be determined or formed.
Enrollment kick-off is targeted for January 17, one month from
today, in front of Aliiolani Hale, the judiciary building that is
fronted by the statue of King Kamehameha. We invite all of you to
join us and sign up in this Hawaiian enrollment.
What else lies in our immediate future? We need to stand
together in the face of the legal challenges still to come. With
ceded lands revenue, we are not yet out of the woods. We will need
joint support of the legislative and executive branches of our
state government to advance fair and just resolution on this
matter.
VII. Closing
I am reminded of a quote shared in opening remarks at Na Oiwi
Olino poster, essay, and debate contest held at the east-west
center. They are words uttered by Kamehameha the great as he
embarked on his historic and difficult journey in establishing a
unified Hawaiian nation:
I mua e na pokii a inu i ka wai awaawa. Aohe hope e hoi mai
ai.
Let us move forward, my brothers and sisters, and drink of the
bitter waters. There is no turning back now. There is no
retreat.
We, the Native Hawaiian community, have courageously taken a sip
of that bitter water and have stepped forward with spiritual
resolve. We must continue to chart the course, accepting our
kuleana and place in this struggle to make things right for Native
Hawaiians. Where we can, we should step forward together,
acknowledging where we have similarities while working through our
differences.
Queen Liliuokalani gave us manao by which to move forward. While
imprisoned at Iolani palace, she said, "I could not turn back the
time for the political change, but there is still time to save our
heritage. You must never cease to act because you fear you may
fail. The way to lose any earthly kingdom is to be inflexible,
intolerant and prejudicial. Another way is to