Ka Wai Ola
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OFFICE
OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS
State
of OHA and the Native Hawaiian Community
Remarks of Trustee Haunani
Apoliona, MSW Chairperson, Board of Trustees
Monday, December 17,
2007, 11:00 a.m.
St. Andrew’s Cathedral
Introduction
Aloha
mai kākou e nā ‘ōiwi ‘ōlino mai Hawai‘i a
Ni‘ihau a puni ke ao mālamalama. Aloha e nā
kūpuna, nā mākua, nā ‘ōpio, nā keiki
a me nā kamaiki e ‘ākoakoa mai nei, ma kēia hale
pule la‘ahia ‘o St. Andrew’s Cathedral, a maloko i ko kākou
mau hale ‘ohana a puni ke ao mālamalama.
Aloha e nā
kama‘āina a me nā malihini kekahi. Aloha nō
kākou a pau loa. Aloha.
(Translation: Greetings to our esteemed fellow Native Hawaiians from
Hawai‘i to
Ni‘ihau and around this brilliant world. Aloha to the
elders, adults, youth, children, and toddlers who have assembled here
at this sacred church, St. Andrew’s Cathedral, in your family
homes, and around this brilliant world.
Greetings to
longtime residents and newcomers alike. Greetings to us all.
Aloha.)
Welcome
to the 5th annual
gathering relating to the State of OHA and the Hawaiian community.
We are very honored to share this time with you here in the Cathedral
Church of Saint Andrew, as well as with those who are joining us
throughout our state, the nation and the world.
We
are pleased to share our message from this prominent sanctuary and
pu‘uhonua
in Hawaiian history with ties to King Kamehameha IV (Alexander
Liholiho ‘Iolani) and Queen Emma in 1862, who commissioned the
building and construction of this Cathedral of Saint Andrew (St.
Andrew’s Cathedral) nearly 150 years ago.
The Status of OHA
The
year 2007 marks OHA’s 27th anniversary since the
swearing in of its first board of trustees. These near thirty years
have presented crossroads to paths unchartered as well as rough
roads, seemingly endless, full of obstacles and challenges. We pause
today to reflect on possibilities just three years away from the
close of this decade.
The
very bedrock of Native Hawaiian self-determination, quasi
independence, was shaken by the U.S. Supreme court ruling against OHA
declaring the “OHA election of Hawaiians by Hawaiians” as
unconstitutional. That happened at the end of 2000. Since that time,
emboldened opponents of Native Hawaiians continue to wield the hammer
of the Federal Courts to shut us down once and for all; but, so far
without success.
Native
Hawaiians and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs have stood steadfast
well into this decade of change and we will continue to stand
steadfast “mau a mau.”
We
have reached out to those of common mission and values. We have
reached out to those to stand with us on common ground, Native and
non-Native, kamaʻāina and malihini alike have worked together
for Native Hawaiians and for Hawaiʻi during this tumultuous decade of
change, and we will continue to do so “mau a mau.”
Particularly
over the past six years, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, trustees and
staff together have diligently and intentionally worked to reach new
levels of professionalism with our partners and our community.
Trustees and staff together have worked to hone our discipline, our
political will and our focus, working from the facts and doing our
homework in as objective a manner as possible.
OHA’s
experienced administrator Clyde Nāmuʻo, in his tenure, has
nurtured stability and performance by the working hands of an Office
that some, in years past, predicted was on the brink of “implosion.”
Since
2000, Native Hawaiians have faced some of our most difficult legal
and political challenges. We have won some court cases while
other cases continue. We know those who question our right to exist
as a unique, aboriginal, indigenous, native people will continue to
file lawsuits against OHA and other Hawaiian entities. Political
risks still exist as well.
With
that as our context, I would like to highlight a few of OHA’s
challenges and accomplishments this past year, then focus on where we
could direct our energies as Native Hawaiian people.
I
would like to share three (3) premises, ʻekolu manaʻo haʻi, ʻekolu
manaʻo nui, with you today.
Manaʻo
nui ʻekahi. The first premise is that: Just by the
nature of who we are as Native Hawaiians, we can make Hawaiʻi
and the world a better place.
What do I mean by “the nature of who we are”?
Throughout the
world there is great concern about survival of the planet, global
warming, the environment, and our quality of life. Native
Hawaiians, just by virtue of stepping forward, can help with those
concerns.
Our island
lifestyle and respect for limited natural resources has been the
legacy of our ancestors, generation to generation. We are
experts in caring for the environment.
Mālama
ʻāina goes to the core of who we are as a people.
Our cultural practices and our values are all about caring for the
ʻāina, loving our motherland, not just to use, but to
conserve and replenish. These traditions and values coincide with the
global desire to protect the environment to secure and sustain a
certain quality of life for future generations.
At OHA,
opportunity has emerged for us to play a direct role in caring for
Hawaiʻi’s natural resources by holding title to key properties
in the Hawaiian culture spectrum, to mālama ʻāina, Wao Kele
O Puna on Hawaiʻi island and Waimea Valley on Oʻahu.
Concurrently,
we have joined the County of Maui, community advocate groups and
Hawaiian beneficiaries in a contested water case being heard before a
hearings office of the State Water Commission for eventual review by
the State Water Commission, a case that may not be resolved until
well into 2008 and likely will be challenged in State Circuit Court
and the Hawaiʻi Supreme Court.
This
is an economic and political milestone, a historic moment for
determining who controls the public trust asset we know as water: is
it a public entity or a private corporation?
Indeed
as an island native and non-native community, we are on the cusp of
significant resource management and stewardship questions and policy
implications.
Native
Hawaiians by virtue of the traditions and values of our ancestors are
in a position to demonstrate how caring for the environment is done.
If
there is the will and discipline, we are also in a position to lead
on these issues for the good of Native Hawaiians and Hawaiʻi.
There
exists a global yearning for better relationships, spirituality, and
the essence of inner mana. This is a basic need of human
beings yet it is difficult to find on a broad level in any nation or
culture.
Our
ancestors were experts in relationships with the universe.
They knew how to balance man, nature, and god. They understood
that harmony and balance meant survival and well-being. True to our
nature, Native Hawaiians strive to live with deep regard and
reverence to this concept, lōkahi, through which we seek to keep
these major life forces in balance.
What
we bring from our culture as Native Hawaiians, as native people, is
what the world and what this nation sorely need. As Native
Hawaiians, we hold this gift. Just by “the nature of who we
are,” holding close to our cultural values, we can help to make
Hawaiʻi, the nation and the world a better place.
Manaʻo
nui ʻelua. The second premise I would like to leave you with today is
that: We Native Hawaiians are on the threshold of critical
decisions.
What
kind of decisions am I speaking of?
Probably
the most critical decision we face, is organizing our Native Hawaiian
government, our 21st century political system. The
Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization Act (Akaka Bill) passed out
of the U.S. House
of Representatives in October of this year and will be heard in the
U.S. Senate.
Allies and
supporters, Native people and non-Native people who support justice
and fairness, are working diligently to inform and enlighten
Republican Senators to support the bill and urge President Bush to
sign it.
But even as we
await passage of the Akaka Bill, we are moving forward toward
building our nation, continuing with Kau Inoa registrations nearing
80,000 and sketching preliminary plans for a nation-building
convention in 2008.
Our formal
Native nation, will enhance the opportunity to manage our assets and
make decisions as a group, using this self-determined process to
include Native Hawaiians, wherever they may reside.
Another
threshold for decision is the looming possibility of a State
Constitutional Convention in 2010. Certain sectors in the community
are promoting the issue and fanning the fire for a State convention.
How might a
State Constitutional Convention affect Native Hawaiians? Will
it be helpful or not?
If a State
Constitutional Convention is held, Native Hawaiians must be in the
mix. We must determine now, how we will get involved so the Native
Hawaiian voice is heard regarding what happens to our homeland, to
our native people and our natural, public, social and economic
resources for the good of all of Hawaiʻi.
We can run as
state con con delegates. We can support Native Hawaiians who
will run as state con con delegates. We can be instrumental in
raising issues and providing solutions that don’t scare others
away. We can help to garner support for issues by organizing
our communities and even organizing our families. And, we must vote.
The 1978 State
Constitutional Convention produced some great advancements for Native
Hawaiians, such as, ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi as the official second
language of the State of Hawaiʻi; the constitutional mandate for
upholding traditional and customary native gathering practices; the
constitutional mandate instituting Hawaiian studies in public
education; and the establishment of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.
A 2010 State
Con Con, if there is one, could build upon that beginning, OR, it
could reverse progress and eliminate these past Constitutional
advancements.
I believe
the group that continues to sue and litigate against Native Hawaiians
in the Federal Court will be mounting a strategy to accomplish
elimination of these constitutional mandates that I mentioned.
Another
threshold for critical decision-making is one that will make or break
the ultimate survival of our Native nation, and the success or
failure of our self-determination efforts ---- What will be the
fibers that run through our decision-making as we form a nation?
What aspects of our history and culture will we draw upon to make
decisions to benefit all of Hawai’i nei?
Will we bring
the best from our past into the future?
Will we have
the courage and the will to guide our decisions for nation, policy
and motherland, that elevate our cultural values, our spiritual
values, balance of god, man, and nature --- lōkahi--- and weave
them throughout---for the well-being of Native Hawaiians and for the
well-being of Hawaiʻi and all who live here.
Manaʻo nui
ʻekolu. The third and final premise I would like to leave you with
today is that: We must seize the moment and stop grumbling.
ʻAʻapo mai i ka
ʻike, ʻaʻapo mai i ka maopopo pono, ʻaʻapo mai i ka lei o ka
lanakila. Mai namunamu, he mea hoʻopaumanawa kēlā. E
kūkulu aʻe kākou no ke ea o ka ʻāina me ke aloha a me
ke aho nui.
The political
climate and the social and economic demands unfolding before us,
light a pathway of opportunity for the Native Hawaiian community.
But the experience will only be an opportunity if we are prepared and
ready.
We
must reflect seriously and commit in a measured timeframe to do all
that we, individually and collectively, can do to stay informed.
We
must do our homework because before too long, we will be in the
formative stages of re-establishing a Native nation of our choosing.
We
will need spiritually mature, culturally grounded, reasonable and
results-oriented Native Hawaiian thinkers and leaders --- driven by
service --- not self-service --- for the Hawaiian community; and, we
will need wise and compassionate leaders in the greater community at
large.
Certain
sectors of our community have done a phenomenal job of displaying
leadership and pushing for achievement against all odds.
One
example is in Hawaiian education.
On their own,
without a nation, and with minimal funding, the Native Hawaiian
education community has established
Hawaiian
language pre-schools;
Hawaiian
language immersion schools for K-12;
Audio
and video libraries of kūpuna who are native speakers;
Hawaiian
language radio programs and newspaper columns;
A
Hawaiian language lexicon committee;
A
Center for Hawaiian Studies within the University of Hawaiʻi;
B.A.,
Master’s, and Ph.D. degrees in Hawaiian language and culture;
Its
own indigenous college at UH Hilo;
After-school
science and culture-based programs;
Hawaiian
teacher training programs;
Hawaiian
language websites;
Culturally-appropriate
college preparatory programs, LSAT preparation programs, alternative
high school programs;
And
Hawaiian culture-based charter schools; that are all exhibiting a
track record of success.
The
opportunities are there as evidenced by those in Native Hawaiian
education. If we want to be leaders in Hawai’i, we must broaden
that span of social and economic influence by increasing participants
and initiatives.
As
Native Hawaiians we hold an important key to Hawaiʻi’s future. We
must recognize it, believe it, handle it with respect and exercise
humility while working in a unified effort.
The
key is a gift at the core of what we value as a people embodied in
our kuleana that has been passed to us from generations before us.
This gift will not flourish by force or demand, but rather will grow
and mature by living and being the nature of who we are.
We
can call on these values and traditions for balance and well-being,
not only for Native Hawaiians but for all. But we must lead,
on an individual basis, then on a collective basis, until it affects
all of Hawaiʻi, the emerging critical mass driven by this
certain spirit of our ancestors and culture.
We
can begin by having respectful interaction and exchange, instead of
standing on the outside and saying, “How come?” Or, “Who
said”?
We
must take responsibility for ourselves. We gotta “get a
grip” and “leave a legacy,” as Auntie Mālia Craver would
say.
What
is needed is thoughtful, focused, disciplined, compassionate and
humble collective effort. Our success means the rest of Hawaiʻi
benefits. If Hawaiians are doing better, there is a positive
impact on everyone. Life will be better for all of us.
It
is with that intent OHA has supported through grants and other
actions the numerous outcomes listed in the 8-page supplement of 2007
OHA actions attached to this message.
We proudly
announce that OHA increased its annual budget to $42 million, with
70% of expenditures going directly to program services.
In 2007, the
OHA Board of Trustees completed four rounds of grant approvals along
with board initiatives to include the multi-million dollar
appropriations to support community empowerment.
The following
are but a few of the hundreds of outcomes cited in the written
supplement provided to you with these remarks. OHA:
Awarded
nearly $4 million to 78 projects providing services and programs
that impact the Hawaiian community and funded 14 Trustee initiatives
totaling more than $6 million for projects addressing needs on all
islands.
Launched
the Mālama Loan Program in a restructured Native Hawaiian
Revolving Loan Fund of $29 million to assist Native Hawaiian
businesses, education, and home improvements.
Provided
grants of $100,000 each to Family Promise of Hawaii, Institute for
Human Services, Catholic Social Services, and ALU LIKE’s Hoʻāla
Hou division to address outreach to homeless families, emergency
homeless shelter, Homeless Transitional Project, and incarcerated
Hawaiian youth and adult services.
Provided
$500,000 in funding to several community health groups to meet
health needs in the Hawaiian community.
Approved
$1.5 million to Hawaiʻi Habitat for Humanity for a 5-year
project to assist Hawaiian families statewide in a first-time
homeownership program with up to $20,000 in matching funds for each
home loan.
Awarded
over $300,000 in scholarships and program assistance to
pre-schoolers attending Wai’anae Coast Early Childhood Center and
the Tūtū and Me program on Moloka’i.
Provided
the final third year of funding for Native Hawaiian Charter Schools
in the amount of $2.2 million (a total of $6.6 million).
Provided
$903,000 in scholarships to Native Hawaiians pursuing a college
degree; and granted $500,000 to College Connections Hawai’i for
500 students in their Native Hawaiian Scholars program.
Awarded
a two-year $500,000 grant for rehabilitiation and renovation of
Kalanianaʻole Hall, on Molokaʻi homestead land in Kalama’ula.
Awarded
a two-year $750,000 grant to support Hoʻokulāiwi: ʻAha
Hoʻonaʻauao ʻŌiwi Center for Native Hawaiian and Indigenous
Education, based at UH Mānoa and leeward Oʻahu, Nānākuli.
Awarded
$500,000 to the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands to support the
Home Ownership Assistance Program (HOAP).
With
OHA’s assets, present and future, and what OHA has been able to
help catalyze for the Hawaiian community in recent years, the moment
is now.
We need to
seize this opportunity. No one can do it for us. We
need to do it ourselves. Pau grumble. It is time for realism
and maturity. It is a matter of stewardship and kuleana,
to seize this moment and not squander it, for it will not come
again.
Closing
As I close let
me say, these manaʻo nui leave many things to think about it.
But we can no longer just think about them.
We must commit and we must act.
On behalf of
the Board of Trustees, Administrator Nāmuʻo and all our OHA
staff from Hawaiʻi to Washington D.C., we say mahalo, thank you for
working with us throughout the year and for having faith that those
of us who are lucky enough to work at OHA in service to our community
and Hawaiʻi will continue our diligence and commitment to our
mission, our responsibility, our kuleana, to better the conditions of
Native Hawaiians.
From the third
verse of Hawaiʻi Ponoʻī........Let us bear the message for our
song not yet complete.
“Hawaiʻi ponoʻī, e ka Lāhui ē, ʻo kau hana nui, e ui ē.”
Those true
to Hawaiʻi, the Hawaiian people, your great duty is to prevail.
Mahalo and
aloha.
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State of OHA speeches
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