Author Archives: Adam Bencze

Live for Molokai: A Profile of Bobby Ocampo

Thursday, March 1st, 2007

Live for Molokai: A Profile of Bobby Ocampo

Bobby Ocampo walks into The Dispatch office, a fine glint of sweat on his shaved heat from walking around town all day in the blazing sun while wearing a sweatshirt and dress pants. He’s carrying a tripod and camera bag and simply asks “howzit?” Bobby has come to talk story with me for a new segment of the paper - partially inspired by him - which is a series of profiles about people on Molokai whose lives are affected by what is happening in the news.

I tell Bobby to come in and sit down but he suggests we sit outside to enjoy the Molokai weather. Bobby produces segments for Akaku television on Molokai, and most of his shows involve La`au Point. I ask him to tell me about his work, and his general mana`o of Molokai:

“I used to be a DJ- I did the karaoke show at Paddlers’- but I quit to be more true to Molokai. When the developers wanted to take La`au away from us, it changed me, you know? It made me think about where I came from, what line, and made me respect my kapuna. Development is disrespectful to the `aina of La`au, and it could be a disaster for Molokai keiki. People here- they know what’s pono for Molokai, we don’t need to be told by anyone else.

“I thank Akua” Bobby points skyward and looks up with genuine wonder, “for my blessings today. La`au made everybody’s priorities clear, and made me want to live better, eat better and walk more, and do what I could to defend Molokai.”

As well as shows he has produced for Akaku, Bobby has performed interviews with people in Kaunakakai over who their favorite person on Molokai is, and has made numerous pilgrimages to La`au Point all in an effort to better understand the island he loves.

Something Has to Give, Timmy

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

Hardaway’s homophobic comments self-oppressive, yet reflect the need for change

As his decidedly anti-amourus caveman-like comments on Valentines Day might suggest, it is possible that Tim Hardaway really has been living under a rock for a few years.

Days after former NBA player John Amaechi (left) came out of the closet right before the release of his new book Man In The Middle, retired Miami Heat guard Tim Hardaway sounded off with the following comments when asked how he would have reacted to having a gay teammate: “I hate gay people, so I let it be known. I don't like gay people and I don't like to be around gay people. I am homophobic. I don't like it. It shouldn't be in the world or in the United States.”

Hardaway made the comments while a phone-in guest on host Dan LeBatard’s Miami radio show. At the time, the 5-time all-star was in Las Vegas working with NBA Cares, a community-outreach program which works with various groups like Read to Achieve, Habitat for Humanity, the Make-A-Wish Foundation, and the Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria(GBC). Hardaway was a five-time all-star, one of the decade’s best point guards in the 1990’s, and played for team USA. He also had a history of philanthropy; for many years Hardaway would donate $20 to cancer research for every assist he racked up in the NBA (Hardaway is 12th on the NBA’s all-time assist leaders list).

It is sad to see a once-great athlete, a hero to many kids especially in the African American community, shoot himself in the foot and ruin any career he may have had in the public eye because of his small-minded, bigoted personal views. Even sadder perhaps, is that it is likely that Hardaway’s views are not altogether rare in professional sports.

Last week, Amaechi himself wrote in ESPN Magazine that “Homophobia is a ballplayer posture, akin to donning a ‘game face’, wearing flashy jewelry or driving the perfect black Escalade.” A well spoken, intelligent athlete, Ameachi arrived at the conclusion that ‘ballers’ didn’t really hate gays, but rather used ‘gaybashing’ as a sort of crutch to empower their ideal of masculinity. One has to wonder, though, how easy it would be to tell the difference were Amaechi out of the closet while still in that small league community.

A member of the Molokai gay community was kind enough to stop by and reflect on the dynamic of homophobia in a small populous. “That basketball player is just an idiot, and I don’t worry about people like that. I think a good rule for everyone to live by is that you don’t need to like everyone, but every person is entitles to a certain amount of respect.

“We’re very lucky because there’s never really been a serious problem here. On Molokai, people are very easy going at work, and in the neighborhoods, with a few small exceptions. Like, you might not see a lot of openly gay hunters, and a few years ago, there was a Mahu show on Halloween, which is always a lot of fun, that was picketed by members of First Assembly Church. But overall, people here don’t get bothered, and that’s a very good thing.”

Some good may come of Hardaway's comments; hopefully, people's curiosity will be piqued and they will read Amaechi’s book. Man in the Middle is a thoughtful and forthright retrospective about being in an oppressive environment. It’s reading by a wide audience may provoke a debate in the population at large about facing homophobic issues in professional sports, an issue that has too long been ignored.


EC Board Fail to Make Quorum

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Master Land Use Plan Advocate Members Duck Highly-Anticipated Meeting

 

In what observers called a highly suspicious coincidence, five Ke Aupuni Lokahi (KAL) board members failed to turn up for a meeting which had been scheduled with months of advance notice. The five absent members stated ahead of time that they would not present prompting Molokai Enterprise Community (EC) executor, Abbey Mayer, to cancel the February 15 meeting. It was to be the first assembly to include newly elected board members Bridget Ann Mowat and Leila D Stone who were both elected in a landslide vote January 31.

The five absentees- John Pele, Rikki Cooke, Shannon Crivello, Treasurer Russell Kallstrom, and President Stacy Crivello - all happen to be proponents of the Master Land Use Plan, which includes the development of 200 luxury home lots on La`au Point on southwest Molokai. Their absence sets back the timeline for the likely inclusion of up to two new EC board members (in addition to Mowat and Stone), the subject of which was to be agendized at the cancelled meeting. More importantly, however, are the trust issue raised by their absence; the ‘Save La`au’ community has perceived the no-show as a delay tactic by the five Master Land Use Plan supporters.

“It is strange that the four who want to save La'au from development showed up and the five who support the Plan did not” said Walter Ritte. “Why are they hiding?” Ritte was one of 40-odd members of the community who did not hear that the meeting was cancelled until they arrived at Kulana O`iwi last Thursday. The group, along with KAL board members Mowat, Stone, Josh Pastrana, and Sybil Dunnam, made the best of the turnout by holding an unofficial community involvement meeting in front of the building.

“It’s pretty despicable, don’t you think?” mused rally member Steve Morgan, “that they would try to derail our momentum by just not showing up. It makes us wonder about their true dedication to the community involvement process.”

Thursday’s meeting would have been a go if one other board had showed; EC bylaws state that official meetings in which issues can be voted on, need five board members present.

The next Molokai EC meeting is scheduled for March 14th at 4pm

 

Japan Day at MHS Explores Youth Culture

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

On display last Saturday were Kanji characters with English translations, Manga (comic artwork closely associated with anime) face outlines with arrangeable features, and bonsai trees for auction. There were also bento box meals and the film Spirited Away on the ticket. The idea behind Japan day is to allow the Molokai community to learn a little about the culture, according to Ms Lisa Kim, MHS Japanese-language sensai. “We also wanted to raise money for upcoming exchange events, so students can maybe go to other islands.”

The Takayama Nishi students themselves were actually at Kalaupapa for the day to learn about the old leper colony’s history, something that is pivotal to understanding the history of this entire island.

Reflection on ‘A Road Less Taken’:

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Profile of Walter Ritte in Hana Hou Magazine Shows Activist’s Sensitive Side to the Outside World


It is safe to say that Hawaiian Airlines has a strikingly better in-flight magazine than most rival airlines offer to their passengers; rather than the usual where-to-eat-dance-and-sleep tripe of so many of their competitors’ rags, Hano Hau magazine offers up in-depth, thoughtful articles on stories from environmental protectionism to pieces on obscure musicians to profiles of the work of local people. Amazingly, these profiles are sometimes even of people who live on islands that Hawaiian Airlines does not even fly to.

One of these subjects is Molokai’s own Walter Ritte, who was profiled in Hana Hou’s February/March (vol 10, no 1) edition. Presented in the article is a very even-handed, thoughtful portrait of the activist that does justice to Ritte’s desire for Molokai and to his character and personality. The piece does not shy away from mention of his arrests and time in prison, but also places great emphasis on the Hoolehua resident’s role in the genesis of the Hawaiian rights movement and his continued and unflinching capacity to stand up for what he believes in.

Cudos to Hana Hou and Hawaiian Airlines for giving their passengers such objective and intelligent food for thought, and for taking the time to listen to a man who, so often, people seem to want to muffle.

For Hana Hou's story on Ritte, visit: http://www.hanahou.com/

Dispatches from the Bridge’s End:

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

 

PRISM School Celebrates 10th Year of Practical Educating

“This school taught me some very important things. Most importantly: to be passionate about your world” seventeen year-old Tiana Conley says magnanimously to a room full of parents and current students at Aka`ula school. There is a reverent sparkle in her young eyes as she remembers a project on a topic not typically associated with fond memories- diapers. “My project on disposable diapers was very important to my education. Like many of you surely do today, I had younger siblings in diapers, and I saw how many disposable diapers were being used, and I just thought ‘wow- that’s entirely too much waste’, so I focused my project on that very problem.”

Tiana, along with Joreen Kepa and Reggie Villa, are former students who were asked to return for the tenth anniversary of PRISM’s founding in Hoolehua. The school focuses on fostering creative students who think independently; much of the work at the school focuses on real-world problems and things students see around them on a daily basis. Hawaii is quite susceptible to climate change, something PRISM has focused on heavily. “This school showed us that we need to be good examples to others of how to live clean lives.” Says Conley.

Seventy-nine year old Dr. Harold Hungerford, who is a founding member of PRISM and the creator of its base curriculum, moves and speaks like a much younger man when engaging the students in political debate.

During one of the debate panels Eighth-grade student Eric Gilliland commented, “Uninformed people shouldn’t be able to make important decisions on the environment, because their lack of knowledge might mislead the public and waste valuable energy and funding.” Gilliland has conviction usually possessed by people much older than he.

“That’s very true”, replies Dr Hungerford, his face brimming with gentle pride, “but uninformed people make these broad decisions all the time. (Informed people) have to align themselves with groups that are best suited to curry influence with those in power… that’s something I’m convinced of.”

After the environmental “debate” (there weren’t any takers for the anti-environmental side), Dr Hungerford sat down with The Dispatch to reflect on a decade of seeing the fruits of his labors on Molokai. “These teachers are amazing; they are making this school, which is a godsend to these students, a great environment to grow as individuals.”

A quick glance around the room provides microcosmic example of the autonomy that PRISM strives for: rather than AV personnel, it is the students who are operating cameras to capture the meetings. There are also students running the power-point presentations which display their findings on pollution at Kaunakakai Wharf. A student moderator in the debates fires off-the-cuff follow up questions at her peers on the panel.

“We want to nurture thoughtful, effective human beings and make sure that our graduates leave the school as responsible, skilled people who are prepared to make a difference in the world.” Dr Hungerford looks around at students working together to make the symposium work. “After ten years we are beginning to see a bigger picture of what the school has produced. I already credit our students with the creation of the HI5 (bottle + can recycling) Bill. As these kids graduate high school, get out in the world, maybe go and live off-island, their potential for greater effect grows. The coming years will be very exciting for data collection.”

It’s About YOU, Parents!

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

 

 

Another RAP Session at Kaunakakai Fosters the Joy of Storytelling

 

“If you only spend one hour of one-on-one time with you child per week, you will only have spent 39 days with them by the time they leave home.” Read Aloud Program (RAP) founder Jed Gaines holds a thick stack of parental feedback forms in his hand as he speaks to a room full of parents. “I found that statistic rather shocking. Spending an hour per week exclusively with your children is not something that everyone is doing. Driving them to school, eating dinner in front of the tv- these activities don’t tend to be great bonding experiences for families”

 

Gaines is on a mission. Noticing high divorce rates and seeing an overall trend of deteriorating American families, the 61 year-old dynamo has been running the Read Aloud Program, a comprehensive educational and family-building tool aimed at getting families together to foster the love of storytelling, for more than a decade. He is humble about Read Aloud’s success, but can’t help being excited over the enthusiasm shown by Molokai families thus far. “Parents come to RAP because they love their children, and want to build strong ohana. They tend to leave here happy with the advice for family togetherness they gain, and we’re very proud that they do.”

 

Gaines feels that his program’s greatest accomplishment is getting families to bond with one another, and wants to help perpetuate that trend by highlighting the joy of storytelling. “One lady last week asked ‘when our family reads together, my husband reads in standard English, but when I read, I translate the stories into Pidgin as I go. My kids yell at me and tell me I’m doing it wrong. Should I stop?’ and the answer is no. The finer points of written language should not be overlooked, and hearing the meter of English is very important to the development of a child’s brain. That said, hearing pidgin helps develop cultural understanding, so reading in both English and Pidgin English is beneficial.”

 

Kaunakakai school hosts the program every second Wednesday at 5:45 through the end of April.

 

SAVE LA`AU CANDIDATES VOTED IN

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

SAVE LA`AU CANDIDATES VOTED IN

 Silent no more; Molokai voters send a clear message not to develop.

Mowat and Stone win EC election decisively as Molokai voters send a clear message: No to the development of La`au Point.



The Results Are In:

In the largest voter turnout in Molokai Enterprise Community (EC) history, challengers Bridget Ann Mowat and Leila Stone upset recumbent board members Colette Machado and Claud Sutcliffe on Wednesday, January 31. Together, Mowat and Stone garnered roughly 66% of votes on the nearly 1,300 ballots cast- a landslide considering there were six candidates on the bill.

Sutcliffe had dubbed the election a “community referendum,” because of the ideological split between the incumbents and the eventual winners over the EC decision to support the development of La’au Point. Mowat and Stone campaigned on a clear ‘No to La’au development’ platform, making the answer in this unofficial referendum a resounding NO; a favorable result for supporters of Hui Ho’opakele ‘Aina and others who voted for the Mowat-Stone bloc and clearly believe La’au is worth saving.

The Hawaiian League of Women Voters acted as enumerators and started accepting votes at 7:30am, but because of the unexpectedly high turnout, had to remain in the voting room in Mitchell Puoule Center until just after midnight counting ballots. Several anxious onlookers stayed for the entire count and endured roughly five hours of “four, five…four, five…”, as enumerators read voter cards of the alphabetically-listed candidates. A power outage put a halt to the vote counting with roughly 20 ballots left to go but winners were announced anyway; Mowat and Stone were ahead of first runner up Machado by nearly 450 votes.

Significance:
This result is an important one to the community involvement process; MPL has always maintained that there is a ‘silent majority’ of Molokai residents who are in favor of the Master Land Use Plan. This election was pivotal in proving what anti-development supporters have maintained all along - that there is no silent majority, and in fact most people do not support the development of La`au.

While 1,284 people officially turning out to vote out of roughly 5,000 eligible voters may not seem like a high percentage, consider that there were fewer than 200 votes cast in the 2006 EC election at this time last year.

Numbers aside, the war of words leading up to this election was furious; media coverage and local attendance at community meetings was widespread enough that even visitors of the island knew the issues. Certainly, those who missed the media coverage and ignored the word-of-mouth buzz could not have missed the hand-painted signs on every roadway on the island. It is safe to say that everyone on Molokai knew of either the Master Land Use Plan or the push to stop La`au development.

In voting out Machado and Sutcliffe, the community has unseated two very well-known, hardworking individuals who have each donated years worth of time on various boards and committees, and who have diligently served Molokai in many facets of public life. In their place, two inexperienced candidates step in to a very contentious arena.

Both Mowat and Stone have admitted they didn’t want to be in politics in the past but felt their hands were forced by an EC board that had stopped listening to the people of Molokai.

Indeed, several attempts were made to put the Master Land Use plan, along with its most controversial aspect – the development of La`au Point, to an official community vote. But the idea was dismissed by a majority of the EC board on November 21 because of “vague wording”.

The November 21 rejection of a public vote was not the only instance whereby the EC board quashed a project capable of decelerating the La`au development. Just two weeks ago, EC board members voted to defer a request to reinstate the Water Moratorium Project (EC project #7). The conservation project would have restricted water use from new west-side developments such as the La`au development, until a water management plan could be created.

In addition to these roadblocks, several members of the community have accused Ke Aupuni Lokahi (KAL), the organization which administers the EC, of not honoring the spirit of public input it purports to strive for. In creating the Molokai Land Trust to work on the Master Land Use Plan, for example, several KAL board members, including Machado, were appointed to that committee. The resulting planning body was one so similar to the EC board that people began confusing the two entities.

Looking Ahead
When the USDA awarded Molokai with an Enterprise Community grant in 1998, the timeline for funding was capped at 10 years, potentially making this vote the second-to-last chance that the community will have to involve itself at this level. As of now, KAL executive director Abbey Mayer says that the organization doesn’t know what the state of public input will be when EC funding sunsets in 2008. Mowat and Stone have secured their places on the EC board until that timeline runs out, and have been empowered with the community’s confidence to channel both government funding and the wishes of the people of Molokai in appropriate directions.

Given the uncertainty of public input and the finite timeline for the influx of public funding, it is as important as ever for Molokai citizens to stay involved in the process. The huge majority of voters who placed their Anti-La`au candidates in power should not shy away from attending EC meetings and lending constructive criticism to new and returning KAL board members.

MPL’s vision for the future: a house on every rock, and a seal on every lawn

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

Every now and again, one ought to just step back and marvel at the bravado with which big business presents its ideas.

Take the MPL press release following the most recent Environmental Impact Statement as a textbook example of top-notch spin-doctoring:

“It is likely that sediment discharge from runoff to the ocean will be significantly less with the Lā‘au Point project compared with existing conditions.” This conclusion is based on several measures planned for Lā‘au Point that will protect near-shore waters from increased degradation of water quality, such as drainage control systems, regulation of the use of fertilizers and pesticides, re-vegetation as a means of permanent erosion control measures throughout the developed areas, and fencing to keep deer and other animals from disturbing the soil.”

Molokai Habitat for Humanity Luau

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

Local Talent on Display at Fundraiser

 

Executive Director for Molokai Habitat for Humanity Jean Han says that material donations for home building are always of great help, but that nothing, of course, is as reliable as money. “Last year we were fortunate enough to have solar panels donated for one project so that one family could keep its energy expenditures down, and we thought- wow, wouldn’t that be great for all homes?” The cost of having photovoltaic adaptors on houses is a little steep for a non-profit housing developer- roughly $11,000 for low-end materials alone and up to $50,000 for more comprehensive systems- so donated systems, which can be exchanged for tax credits, are worth their weight in gold.

  Note: On June 17th all seven chapters of Habitat for Humanity in Hawaii will be undertaking their 4th annual ‘build-a-thon day’ in the Aloha State. Anyone wishing to volunteer their time and/or materials, on that day or sooner, would be greatly appreciated. Contact Molokai Habitat at 808 560-5444 or ohana@aloha.net