A Show of Strength
Strong Man Competition draws big crowds.
All competitors in the men’s and women’s divisions received a three month membership to Na`Pu`uwai Fitness Center, to begin training for next year’s event.
Strong Man Competition draws big crowds.
All competitors in the men’s and women’s divisions received a three month membership to Na`Pu`uwai Fitness Center, to begin training for next year’s event.
“Sharing the Christmas Spirit Molokai Style”
By Jennifer Smith
ers.Additional entertainment included the dancing talents of Moana Kupuna Hula Halau, music by Uncle Kelii Mawae & Friends, a few holiday numbers by Akaula School students, a multi-generational performance by the Uplink Haka Dancers, and some original songs by the Girl Power Club.
The sky dark, and the lights shining Kammy, Kaui, and Jason sang and danced to some beautiful island classics.
However, it was Auntie Ruthie’s shouting of: “Jesus is the reason for the season,” that got community members on their feet for some upbeat melodies.
After nearly two and a half hours of holiday entertainment, Auntie Ruthie’s soulful harmonies brought the evening to a close by inviting the crowd to join together in singing Silent Night.
Winners of the wreath contest included Hala Pa Kala for most beautiful creation, and Claire Kapali of Kalaupapa for her most original creation which featured red and green soda pop cans.
Organizers of the community event gave a big mahalo to their impromptu MC, Scarlett Ritte for agreeing to host the event only minutes after she arrived. Likewise, they recognized the Chamber Foundation, Queens Foundation, Young Brothers Ltd., and Maui Electric for their support.
“Man’s best friend.” Kawai Pua`a-Spencer shares his third place finish with a canine friend.
Cold head-aches and frozen teeth didn’t stop this hungry 8-year-old! 1st place winner in the ice cream eating contest, Alex Salazar shows victory his all over his face.
By Jennifer Smith
It was with open ears and eyes that Hawaii District Attorney Ed Kubo visited Molokai last Tuesday. Being the first district attorney, to his knowledge, to visit the island, Kubo declared, “We are going to spread our wings; we are going to do enforcement on all of the islands.”
Kubo focused his efforts on addressing ice use on the island, otherwise known as crystal meth. Hawaii introduced the drug to the mainland almost 15 years ago, and has since topped the charts repeatedly for ice use.
“Ice is a generation killer,” Kubo explained to Molokai High School students. In discussing how dangerous the drug is, Kubo said, “it robs future generations of their potential.”
The rock like substance appears a lot less attractive when told it contains ingredients such as battery acid, paint thinner, ammonia, and drain cleaner.
However, even more disturbing is what these chemicals can do to the body. Several students squirmed in their seats when shown images of the physical effects of drug use: sunken eyes, rotting teeth, and emaciated faces.
Beyond the physical damage, being caught with just one gram of ice, which is about the size of a sugar packet, can land a person in prison for up to 20 years.
A Hawaii native, Kubo sees the prevalence of ice on the islands as a black eye to aloha and ohana. While Kubo and other state law-makers agree that prevention is key, they say that in-your-face anti-drug campaigns that are successful in other states won’t work in Hawaii. Kubo said the state is too culturally sensitive to use aggressive commercial advertising.
“Bluntness is never an acceptable trait here,” the US Attorney explained. Consequently, without the resources to hit all age levels on a consistent basis, Kubo continues to travel, speaking to as many community members as possible.
His jam-packed schedule on Molokai also included a community meet and greet at the Kaunakakai cafeteria, a discussion of the dangers of identity theft with kupuna, and a sit down with police to learn more about crimes occurring on the island.
“The more I get to know this island the more I can figure out how to help it,” Kubo said. He stressed his ability to provide resources to the island, which include Federal funding.
Kubo saw this visit as the first of many to Molokai, and mentioned that he is planning on returning in the spring.
If you or someone you know has a drug abuse problem and would like information on how to get help call Aloha United Way for treatment referrals, dial 2-1-1.
Facing a potential rejection, Molokai Ranch’s legal counsel motioned to withdraw proposed Final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the La`au Point development. After nearly two days of public testimony the Land Use Commission (LUC) members were left empty handed. With no document to act upon, the hearing was adjourned before receiving a presentation from the petitioner, Molokai Properties Limited, the Ranch’s parent company.
Organized and respectful nearly 350 people filtered in and out of the Lanikeha Building in Ho`olehua during Thursday’s hearing. Commissioners heard from individuals on all sides of the fence concerning MPL’s proposed Final EIS.
Where some testimonies provided documented environmental reasoning, others played to a more humanistic perspective in discussing potential cultural and social implications.
However, it was the culmination of testimonies on Thursday night that drew the crowds out, leaving standing room only for attendees. An impressive “red sea” of a`ole La`au shirts as one onlooker described it, filled the room.
Appreciative and receptive to the chanting and dancing of testimonies that provided an enhanced cultural perspective, commissioners reminded the public that the hearing was to address the acceptability of the proposed Final EIS, and not whether La`au Point would be developed.
Nearly 12 hours of testimony on Thursday prompted Commissioner Reuben SF Wong to motion for a vote rejecting the proposed Final EIS, before MPL provided their presentation about the document.
It took several recesses until legal counsel on both sides could find documentation in the Hawaii Revised Statutes to allow for the withdrawal of the document. MPL has promised to send written copies of their official withdrawal in the upcoming days to the LUC and Office of Environmental Quality Control (OEQC).
LUC Executive Officer Anthony Ching said the OEQC will decide MPL’s next step. The expected outcome will be for MPL to file a new Draft EIS, according to Ching.
The Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation awards a total of 400 scholarships annually to students attending higher-education institutions granting two-year degrees.
Corpuz’s goal is to eventually complete her bachelor’s degree in either Psychology or Human Services. “I would like to work with troubled youths and create programs that can help our youth cope with their problems. Winning this scholarship has helped me realize that I am on the right track with my educational goals and the funds will help me move forward with those goals,” Corpuz said.Three of the six team members on the State Championship winning boys 12 division A paddling team are “transplants” from Molokai to Maui.
The boys are all members of the Wailea canoe club in Kihea, Maui. After winning all of their season races, the team went on to win the 2007 State Championship held in Hanalei, Kauai.Proud grandmother Margaret Blount says, “you can take the boys out of Molokai but you can’t take the Molokai out of the boys! These boys are champions of Maui and Molokai and we are very proud of them. Its also pretty cool that just as their parents grew up
hanging out together on Molokai, these Molokai/Maui boys are growing up together on Maui...but LOVES to visit family on Molokai every chance they get!!”
Pictured left to right...Max Oneha, Justin?(team member), Trent Corpuz,
and Joe Kang.
By Jennifer Smith
Jeanne Wakatsuke Houston’s powerful novel, Farewell Manzanar, tells the story of a young girl and her family being relocated to an internment camp during World War II. Treated as criminals, separated from loved ones, and having almost all of their worldly possessions confiscated by the government, the story of what happened to Japanese-Americans during WWII is an important one that younger generations can learn from.
The first author, in a series of authors that will visit Molokai for the “Celebrate Reading” program this school year, Houston, gave two readings, as well as took part in a lively discussion last Friday at the Middle School and High School.
Houston first came to Molokai 50 years ago, on her honeymoon with husband and fellow author, James D. Houston. Returning this time to speak to the community, she carried with her a message of tolerance, education, and a history rich with important lessons learned.
Houston’s family was sent to a Japanese internment camp in 1942. At the young and impressionable age of seven, she would spend the next four years of her life living within the gates her own country had placed around her.
At the time Japanese-American’s were considered by the government as “potential enemies to the United States,” and consequently, felt the need to sacrifice much of their cultural identity. Life in Manzanar, one of the first camps created as a result of Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066, was an often unsavory version of what it was thought to “be an American”.
Houston’s readings discussed everyday life in the camp, as well as hitting home with the aftermath of life when Japanese-Americans returned back into society. After beginning a new school and realizing that the prejudice that she anticipated and feared would be more subtle and long lasting than initially anticipated, Houston explains her, “desperate desire to disappear.”
When asked by a student what inspired her to write the book, Houston explained an initial desire to create a memoir, and a personal journey that brought her to writing a novel. When her nephew, who was born in Manzanar, yet knew nothing about the camp, asked her to tell him about her experiences, she realized that there was more to the story than what she could easily verbalize.
The novel took nearly a year, and hundreds of hours of conversations with her collaborative partner and husband to write. Houston realized that this process was the first time she had, “allowed herself to feel.” Suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, like many other former internees, it took her a long time to fully explain the long lasting effects of her experiences in the camp and after.
When asked what the hardest part of being in Manzanar was, Houston abruptly answered, “the break up of the family.” Having her father sent to a separate camp and the consequent structure and identity of her family broken, she described it as a, “divorce and death in the family all at once.”
Houston further explained that the novel is about her father, and how it helped her to understand what he had gone through. Coming to this understanding, bringing to life a not so pleasant, but nonetheless real part of history, and consequently educating people about the importance of learning from the past, Houston was able to say, “Farewell to Manzanar.”
The United States government, headed by President George H.W. Bush, attempted to say farewell to this not so pleasant detail in history, by signing into law a formal Amendment of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which provided $20,000 in redress payments to remaining internees, as well as issuing a formal apology.
After her reading, several seasoned community members, as well as a handful of high school students that had read her book, joined together in an emotional discussion with Houston. Molokai resident, Bruce Yoshimura and his family were placed in an internment camp when he was just one-year-old. While, not remembering the event himself, Yoshimura witnessed the long term effects of the internment on several members of his family.
Yoshimura did receive a redress payment and formal letter of apology; however, he felt dismayed by the fact that many older Japanese-Americans, who truly suffered in the camps and have since passed on, were unable to see the Amendment to the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 enacted.
Bringing together younger and older generations, to share in a love of literature, is the noble mission of “Celebrate Reading”. The program provides an incentive for students to read by allowing those who have read the visiting author’s book an opportunity to take part in a breakout session.
Director of the “Celebrate Reading” program for the state of Hawaii, Lorna Hershinow has put together an impressive line up of authors for this year’s festival. Patricia Wood, Cynthia Kadohata, Kealoha, and Ilima Loomis will all visit Molokai in the spring to help support and encourage the students reading. Before the annual festival in April, Hawaiian author Matthew Kaopio will give a teleconference for students from UHM.
Community members are encouraged to attend the “Celebrate Reading” events, in order to both enjoy the visiting authors speak, as well as hopefully impart some stories of their own with the students attending.
CRIME OF THE WEEK 11/05/07
This week the Maui Police Department and Maui Crime Stoppers, asks for the public’s assistance in locating Kevin KAAKIMAKA. KAAKIMAKA is wanted for Commercial Production of Marijuana in the First Degree and Prohibited Acts Relating to Drug Paraphernalia. KAAKIMAKA may be on Molokai. His bail has been set at $25,000.KAAKIMAKA is described as a Hawaiian male, age 29, 5’11” tall, weighing approximately 170 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes.
Anyone with information concerning KAAKIMAKA’S whereabouts or recent movements is asked to call Maui Crime Stoppers at (808) 242-6966. Neighbor Island residents can call toll free at 1-888-242-6966. Do not give your name. Callers will remain anonymous and be given a code number.Maui Crime Stoppers pays cash rewards of up to $1000 for information leading to the arrest and indictment of persons responsible for felony crimes; the recovery of stolen property or seizure of illegal drugs in felony cases; or the capture of felony fugitives.
Consider all wanted persons as dangerous. Do not approach, follow or take other action that could put one in danger.