Author Archives: Dan Murphy

Arbor Party

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Arbor Party

Hawaii’s Arbor Day came and went last Friday without many people on Molokai noticing. But that wasn’t the case for Bill Garnett and some of Molokai’s dedicated students. They spent the entire day preserving native Hawaiian plants along the Kalaupapa trailhead.

Garnett is a rare Hawaiian plants specialist who works for the University of Hawaii and has spearheaded environmental projects across the state.

“Arbor Day is pretty much my Christmas,” he said. “I love it because today I get a lot of people to come out and plant with me.”

For the fifth year in a row, Garnett celebrated his favorite day of the year by inviting the public to join him in planting native Hawaiian species at the top of the Pali Trail leading down to Kalaupapa. Garnett said volunteers have planted hundreds of native plants and helped to eradicate invasive species during the annual event.

This year, most of Garnett’s assistants were local students. Sixth graders from Kaunakakai School spent their morning learning about the environment and getting their hands dirty while planting. After school, the Molokai Environmental Protection Organization (MEPO) took over.

MEPO is an after-school environmental club at Molokai High School that was started as a student project over 30 years ago.

“We basically just do environmental projects and try to make the kids aware of their environment and what they can do to help save it,” said club advisor and high school teacher Robert Bento.

The club, which meets almost every Friday afternoon, has grown over the years and now has over 30 members. Almost 20 of them were on hand last Friday to help with the planting.

“It’s a really fun way to come out and do community service and other stuff that will help with getting into college,” said Molokai High junior Denichel Ruiz. Ruiz said she chose to volunteer with MEPO because it is a good way to get outdoors and experience her environment.

This year Ruiz and her classmates spent the afternoon planting two endangered Hawaiian plants. The `awikiwiki vine and the Kokio kaokao (white hibiscus) are two plants that grown only on the northern coast of Molokai.

Garnett took time during the planting to teach the students about the plants, why they are important and how to protect them.

Garnett said he is always happy when the high school students give up their time to help. He hopes that these types of events will encourage the students to find careers as environmentalists.

“It’s important to point out that these kids are giving up their own time on a Friday afternoon to come out and help. That’s a really good commitment,” Garnett said.

MEPO does similar projects throughout the school year at different locations on the island such as the rainforest and Pu’u O Hoku Ranch. Bento said they are also planning a long weekend to work in Kalaupapa this year and have gone to Kaho`olawe in the past as well.

“I just want to thank all of our volunteers who came out to help,” Garnett said.  “I also want to especially thank the Meyer family who owns this property for giving us access and helping to preserve an important part of the culture.”

Scoreboard

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Scoreboard

 

 

 

 

Last Week’s Scores

Island Youth Football League
Molokai Peewees       6
Ewa Beach               34

Molokai Termites     12
Ewa Beach               44

Molokai Youth Baseball

LVBA Fall Desert Classic
Molokai 12, Las Vegas 2
Molokai 17, Arizona Devils 2
Molokai 23, Las Vegas Lightning 2
Molokai 17, Las Vegas Titans 5
Molokai 6, Utah Bandits 2
Molokai 16, California Diamond Dogs 4
Molokai 4, Lamorinda Diablos 3

Coming up…

Girls’ High School Basketball
11/27 Molokai v. King Kekaulike 7 p.m. @ The Barn
11/28 Molokai v. King Kekaulike 10 a.m. @ The Barn

Price of Admission

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Price of Admission
DLNR planning to raise prices across the state

The price of parking your boat in harbors across Hawaii may rise by as much as 100 percent in the near future. The Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR) has proposed raising prices of mooring rentals to help pay for much needed repairs and maintenance across the state as a part of their “Plan B” to revitalize state parks.

First Time’s The Charm

Monday, November 9th, 2009

First  Time’s The Charm

Molokai Girl Wins Kayaking Championship

Pualei Lima is a quick learner and an even quicker kayaker. Lima, a junior from Molokai at Kamehameha Oahu, took home the Interscholastic League of Honolulu (ILH) kayaking championship in her very first year competing in the sport.

Lima competed in the sprint races in her debut season and saved her best time of the year for the championship last weekend. She sped through Ala Wai Canal course in 1:06.58 to beat her teammate and second place finisher Rhaynedel Oclit by more than three seconds. Punahou High’s Christina Lighter rounded out the top three with a time of 1:10.05.

Eighteen girls raced from six different ILH schools. While the race was not technically a state championship, it was the equivalent because ILH schools are the only schools in the state that offer kayaking as a sport.

“It felt really good,” Lima said. “It was good to feel accomplished and beat other people who were a little more accomplished than I was.”

Lima, who was born and raised on Molokai, has been paddling since she was six years old but never went solo until this year. She joined the paddling team at Kamehameha in her freshman year and said she decided to kayak this year to get in shape for the winter season.

She certainly appears to be in shape as the paddling season gets under way, but Lima said the technique is completely different.

“It’s way different kayaking, you need more balance and the technique is harder to pick up. With paddling, I guess I am just used to it,” she said.

It’s not surprising she’s so comfortable with the sport. Lima was in a canoe before she was even born. Her mother, Tania Kaholoaa, coaches the girls’ Waakapaemua Canoe Club team and said she used to paddle when she was pregnant with her daughter.

“She was always in the boat with me,” Kaholoaa said. “I’ve been a coach for about 20 years and paddling has always been a part of her life.”

Lima’s experience with her mom at Waakapaemua got her used to the taste of victory. The Molokai team has finished in the top three spots in each of the last three state tournaments during the summer. In 2007, they won it all.

After a lifetime in the wa`a, Lima said she was starting to get tired of paddling and didn’t like competing at Kamehameha as much as she used to enjoy the races on Molokai. But, after her quick surge to the top, Lima said she plans on staying in the kayak for a while.

Double Duty

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Double Duty

Kualapu`u School students compete in biathlon.

 All 51 Kualapu`u fifth graders crowded around Kaunakakai’s Cooke Memorial Pool last Thursday morning to cheer on their classmates at the start of the school’s second biannual biathlon.

Each student was required to swim four laps in the pool (100 meters) and run a mile. Kualapu`u Physical Education teacher Mike Kahale said this was the second year he has brought the students to the pool for the biathlon.

“We’re trying to expose the kids to different things, trying to challenge them physically and mentally,” he said. “We’re trying to make these things routine for them so they will expect it.”

The fourth, fifth and sixth graders at the school also have to run a mile every Friday at school in addition to their weekly gym class. Kahale said Kualapu`u is lucky to be the only Molokai elementary school that hires a full-time P.E. teacher. His position allows him to create special events like this one to keep kids in shape.

Kahale Ramos won the fifth-grade race this time around with a time of 12:01. Yasemin Soares blew away the competition on the girls’ race winning by nearly three minutes with a time of 14:41.

The sixth-grade class ran their biathlon last Monday and Kaimana Kahale was the first to finish in a few seconds under 10 minutes. Brooke Ka`awa won the sixth grade girls race in 13:36.

After the hard work is over, the kids are rewarded by getting to play in the pool.

“I got tired and side pains, but the fun part is afterwards we get to go swimming,” said fifth-grader Peni Tilini.

Kanilyn Nishihira-Aki said she likes to run the race because it helps to get her into shape.

“It’s fun,” she said. “I finished in 17:13, but I think I can beat that next time.”

Kanilyn and her classmates will get a chance to beat their times at the end of the school year when they run and swim again.

Bringing Home Bronze

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Molokai Volleyball finishes third in state tournament.

By Dan Murphy

The Molokai girls’ volleyball team completed its season last weekend with the best finish in the program’s history. The Farmers came from behind to beat Hilo High (25-27, 25-16, 15-5) at the Stan Sheriff Center on Oahu Saturday night to secure third place in Hawaii’s Division II.

“We were excited with the finish,” said Head Coach Matt Helm. “But, I think a lot of people had higher expectation for us and we did too.”

Nurse files suit against Molokai General Hospital

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

A nurse who lost her job at Molokai General Hospital (MGH) in August has filed a lawsuit claiming she was wrongly fired. Molokai resident Elizabeth Price filed a civil lawsuit in Hawaii’s circuit court at the end of September against the hospital and their parent company, Queen’s Medical Center in what she and her attorney are calling a whistleblower case.

Price and her attorney believe she was fired because she was “blowing the whistle” by reporting fellow employees and the hospital administration for improperly treating patients.

“It’s as ugly as it gets,” said attorney Michael Green. “I have absolute proof that the hospital attempted to conspire with others to falsify records to cover up the real reason my client was fired.”

Help Wanted

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

PUC allows three interveners in water rate increase case.

Hawaii’s Public Utilities Commission (PUC) decided earlier this month that the stack of issues surrounding possible water rate increases on Molokai was too much for them to sort through. The County of Maui, West Molokai Association and Stand For Water were all named as interveners in the case.

When in Rome

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

When in Rome

The morning of Father Damien’s canonization dawned cold, dark and rainy in Rome. Eighty thousand people from around the world packed into St. Peter’s Square, jockeying for a chance to get inside of the famous Basilica. A small group from a tiny island in the middle of the Pacific pushed through the crowds to reach a special side entrance before taking their reserved seats a few feet away from the alter. They were VIPs.

Those VIPs, 11 Hansen’s disease patients from Kalaupapa and Hale Mohalu hospital in Honolulu, were treated as celebrities for the entirety of their two-week trip to Europe. They were part of a Hawaiian tour group of over 500 people that traveled to Belgium and Italy to celebrate the life of Hawaii’s first saint.

“It was first class everywhere we went,” said Kalaupapa patient Clarence “Boogie” Kahilihiwa. “At every event we were always given the highest priority.”

is about two flights of stairs beneath the church,” explained Kahilihiwa. “It’s so silent in there, but when you get down there you really feel like Damien is there to greet you – gives you chicken skin.”

The first-class treatment and once in a lifetime experiences continued as the group moved on to Italy for the second week of their trip. Mary Igarta, another Molokai resident who made the pilgrimage, said seeing all of the holy sites in Rome and being present for the canonization was a very spiritual event.

“It reminded me how proud I was to be a catholic from Molokai and so close to Father Damien. Having over 500 Hawaiians people present at the canonization was amazing,” she said.

While in Rome the patients had two audiences with the pope and were specially invited to visit the U.S. Embassy.

Presidential Recognition
At the embassy, the group met with cardinals from around the world, Hawaiian Senator Daniel Akaka, Congressman Donald Payne and Honolulu Bishop Larry Silva. The American dignitaries were part of a four-man group selected by President Obama to represent the United States at Damien’s canonization. The fourth member was Kalaupapa’s own Steve Prokop.

Prokop, the National Park Service Superintendent at Kalaupapa, received a phone call from the White House asking him to represent the country during his trip to Europe.

“Getting a call from the White House was completely out of nowhere. I wasn’t expecting to be named to the delegation, but it was a great honor,” Prokop said.

As part of the delegation, Prokop received a behind-the-scenes tour of the Vatican, attended special receptions in Rome and met the King and Queen of Belgium.

“We rode around with police escorts wherever we went. It was certainly one of the personal and professional highlights of my life,” Prokop said.

He said that the most exciting part of the trip for him was seeing how well the patients were treated throughout the entire trip. After being treated so poorly in the past, he was happy to see all of his Kalaupapa neighbors getting the respect they deserve.

The patients were not looking for fame, but they were also happy about the treatment they received overseas.

“Everybody felt real, real good about it,” Palea said. “I wouldn’t say we were celebrities. People just wanted to talk to us to get closer to Father Damien.”

The irony of being in the spotlight after generations of Kalaupapa residents were marginalized by society wasn’t lost on the patients.

“A hundred years ago they would’ve said, ‘What are these lepers doing here?’ and now we are meeting ambassadors and every place we went we were the first ones to go,” Kahilihiwa said with a laugh.

Never Forget

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Never Forget

Twentieth anniversary of plane crash remembered.


This Wednesday, half a dozen Molokai residents will gather early in the morning for a ritual they have completed every October 28 for the past 20 years. They will travel east across the island, stopping at cemeteries along the way before tossing flowers into the ocean at Kamalo Wharf. The group, the surviving members of the 1989 Molokai High girls’ volleyball team, is still tightly bound by the teammates and coaches they lost in a fatal plane crash that year. 

“We are all really close,” said Bill Dudoit, who was an assistant coach that year. “Of course we still cry during the sad parts, but it’s mostly remembering them in good ways now. We share happy memories and the nice things we remember about them.”

The afternoon after clinching the Maui Interscholastic League championship 20 years ago, Dudoit and seven members of the newly-crowned Farmers flew back to Molokai. The rest of the team was scheduled to arrive that night on Aloha Island Air Flight 1712. They never made it.

Priscilla Maliu, 15 years old at the time, was celebrating the win with a few of her teammates when she got the news.


“We were having fun at the park and a bunch of friends came and told us they didn’t know where the plane was. I was kind of in shock,” she said.

The girls spent the night at the airport waiting for news that never came. The following morning they learned that the plane had crashed on the cliffs of Molokai’s northeast coast and that none of the 20 people on board survived.

“It felt like the whole island was there when he heard. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to go through in my life,” Dudoit said.

Among the 20 passengers were five members of the girls’ team – Leilani Ahina, Lea Dunnam, Natalie Helm, Kaipo Maihiai and Aloma Spencer. Their head coach Odetta Rapanot was also on the plane, along with Athletic Director John Ino and three members of the boys’ volleyball team – Jared Elia, Testa Ku and Jovencio Ruiz.

The Molokai community immediately came together in support of the team and the families of the victims, but plenty of tough times were still ahead.

The Game Must Go On
The conference championship gave Molokai an automatic spot in the Hawaii state tournament on Oahu. The 20-year-old Dudoit and his players were faced with the tough decision of whether or not to play in the tournament with the seven remaining members of the team.

“At first it was a really hard choice,” Dudoit said. “The girls were so down and out. Every time we went on the court, they would just start to cry. But, one day we sat down and I told them it was really their decision.”

For the girls on the team, there really was no decision to make.

“We had to, for them. It was tough but we knew that we had to go on and play for our teammates,” Maliu said.

The team arrived on Oahu and was immediately swarmed by reporters who had heard about the tragedy. They hoped that getting back onto the court and playing would provide a brief break from the pain, but there was no escaping it.

“It was really hard to play,” Maliu said. “It was really hard to do anything at that point. I remember even things like showering and eating would somehow remind me of them.”

When the team walked into the sold-out gym for their first game they were greeted with a two-minute standing ovation.

“There wasn’t a dry eye in the gym,” said Barbara Helm, whose daughter died in the crash. “It was somber but we all wanted to go and be in the stands to support the girls.”

The girls played six games and didn’t win a set. It didn’t matter. For the team, just showing up was a victory.

Helm said the parents of the victims wanted the girls to play and decided that they needed to be there to support the team no matter how hard it would be.

Keeping the Memory Alive
Helm and her husband, Larry, are still regular fixtures in the Molokai High bleachers. In fact, many of the people most deeply affected by the crash are still very involved in Molokai volleyball today.

The five girls from the 1989 team that still live on Molokai play together every year in alumni tournaments and adult community leagues. Maliu recently started coaching a middle school team. Dudoit coaches the boys’ volleyball team and Matt Helm, Natalie’s brother, is now the head coach of the girls’ team.

“Giving back to the sport helps us all stay connected to those girls,” Helm said. “I would be lying if I said that wasn’t some of the motivation in coming out to coach.”

Both the boys and girls’ teams decided to dedicate their 2009 season to the memory of those that died in the crash. The girls have worn shirts with “1712” printed across their back all season to remember the flight.

The coaches, too, make sure that day is never forgotten. Helm, Dudoit and Maliu all said that they talk to their teams every year about the accident, the team and the students that were lost.

“I just want to make sure they know that part of our history and our tradition,” Helm said. “It helps them knowing what the ’89 girls went dealing with their own adversity. Mostly, though, it’s just to remind them that life is precious.”

Talks and time have healed some of the wounds for those closest to the crash, but the scars will never fade. When asked how often they think about their teammates both Dudoit and Maliu answered immediately, “Everyday.”

This weekend, at about the same time Dudoit and the surviving teammates are making their annual memorial trip, Helm and his 2009 Farmers will be back at the state tournament on Oahu to put their undefeated record on the line and fight for a championship. Helm said he already spoke to the girls about the crash this week at practice and he was sure it would come up again during the weekend.

“I think it’s a good thing to talk about,” Dudoit said. “A lot of the families of the girls were afraid that people would forget about them. They’re not forgotten.”