Author Archives: Catherine Cluett

St. Damien Church Gets Go-Ahead

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

St. Damien Church Gets Go-Ahead

It’s been 15 years since the Saint Damien Parish began preparing to build a new church. With that much groundwork behind them, it’s no wonder that the Molokai Planning Commission unanimously approved the Parish’s plans last week to build their new church. The St. Damien Church will be on the site of the old St. Sophia’s in Kaunakakai.

The 6,612 sq. feet building will be constructed of concrete, and incorporate design elements that have been included historically in churches built by Damien, according to consultant Chris Hart of Chris Hart & Partners. In addition to providing a worship space, the church plan also includes a multi-purpose room, classroom and meeting spaces for religious education, and a church narthex.

“St. Damien will be, as St. Sophia’s was, the centerpiece of Kaunakakai town,” said County Council Chair Danny Mateo, who spoke in favor of the church’s approval before the Molokai Planning Commission last Wednesday.

Molokai Staff Planner Mikal Torgerson said the church’s design is in compliance with all zoning regulations, the County general plan, and the Molokai Community plan. He added that the church plan had also been sent to 17 outside agencies for approval.

“This project was heavily scrutinized,” Torgerson said. “We believe that it’s compliant with all applicable regulations.”

In addition to approving the Special Management Area Use permit needed to build the church itself, commissioners also gave the okay for multi-use joint parking facilities with the Federal Credit Union which will provide an additional 34 parking stalls.

“I’ve watched the care and thoroughness that’s gone into the design,” said Molokai Planning Commissioner John Sprinzel in his approval of the church.

Members of the Catholic Church community came out in force to show their support of the new church.

“We will realize our dream of worshipping as a family in new church on midnight Christmas Eve 2011,” said one parishioner.

Polynesian Ink

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Polynesian Ink

Tricia Allen sits with the books she’s authored spread before her, pen in hand. A lei po`o rests atop her salt and pepper hair, her fair-skinned face curving in a mild-mannered smile. A couple of tattoos peak out of her Hawaiian print shirt. But you’d never guess by looking at her that Allen is a tattooist and expert on Polynesian tattoo history and art.

“It’s a mark that identifies who you are and where you’ve been,” Allen says of tattoos.

A Kane`ohe resident, Allen visited Molokai last Saturday for a book signing at Kalele Bookstore in Kaunakakai. Her most recent book, “The Polynesian Tattoo Today,” is a compilation of 216 photos representing the work of 73 artists from around the globe. The event attracted a generous audience, from local tattoo artists to “tattoo virgins,” curious to find out more.

“I’ve wanted to meet this woman for 15 years,” said Teri Waros, owner of Kalele Bookstore and Divine Expressions.

Creative Process
While her last book, “Tattoo Traditions of Hawaii,” delves more into the history and context of tattoos in Hawaii, “The Polynesian Tattoo Today” has very little text – a sure hit on your coffee table. It beautifully highlights the artists’ work itself.

“Lots of people just want to share their art and not write about it,” she explains.

To create the book, Allen contacted many of the world’s most well-respected Polynesian tattooists she had met or heard of. She asked them to send photos of their work or contact their clients for photos. In some cases, she arranged photo shoots to capture the images. Out of 748 submissions, 216 images made the final cut. The product is a stunning presentation of the best Polynesian-style tattoos around the globe, from small pieces to art that covers much of the body. 

Allen has traveled the world studying Polynesian tattoo traditions, and combines her academic background with an organic and deeply cultural understanding of the art. She says the average time with a client before completing the tattoo is eight months. That time is spent getting to know her client and helping them design a tattoo that means something to them. Both body placement and the design itself influences the meaning of a Polynesian tattoo. Every symbol has meaning, though that meaning can be different for each individual, according to Allen.

Tattoos and Academia
Allen hasn’t always had a passion for tattoos. She was working at the Denver Art Museum, where there was a display featuring a full body tattoo.

“I used to walk by the display, thinking ‘why would anyone do that?’”

But Allen’s interest in tattoos grew – sparked, she says, by an interest in the cultural, historical and artistic aspect of Polynesian tattoo traditions. She went on to get her master’s degree in Anthropology from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, completing her master’s thesis on the early practice of tattooing in the Marquesas Islands.

She continued her studies, researching the revival tattooing in the Pacific Islands, including Samoa, Aotearoa, the Society Islands, the Marquesas, Rapa Nui and Hawaii. She trained to become a tattooist herself, and has now tattooed over 8,000 members of the Polynesian community.

“Now half my friends look like that guy in the case at the museum,” she laughs.

Learning the Art
Tattoos aren’t always pretty – sometimes they’re ugly, Allen admits. But they are a part of you, often marking important transitions in your life. She says the first time she held a tattoo machine, she was tattooing herself. The results weren’t necessarily pretty but proved a valuable part of her training.

She says she makes her apprentices learn the same way. One of the biggest challenges of tattooing, she explains, is using the right amount of pressure to hit certain depths of the skin tissue. The only way to learn what is too deep and what will fade is to observe that tattoo over a period of time. You can either do that by learning on yourself or learning on your dog, she laughs.

Allen has campaigned for hygienic practices around the world, and says she has seen a huge improvement in some areas. She has also worked to revise state statutes for tattoo licensing and testing for people to become a legal tattooists.

Allen talked with her audience about the challenges of tattooing, its history and revival in the Pacific Islands, its cultural and social implications today, and her own mana`o as a tattooist.

“I’m just a tool in this process – to find out what’s in your mind, put it on paper, and eventually on the skin,” Allen explained.

Allen’s books are available at Kalele Bookstore, Coffees of Hawaii, Molokai Public Library, on Allen’s website, www.thepolynesiantattoo.com, and other locations.

Planning for the Plan

Friday, May 7th, 2010

County planners have been planning for it, Planning Commissioners have been waiting on it and residents have heard about it for years. The Molokai Community Plan update is finally on the move. Maui County planners are working to kick-start the development process on Molokai with a series of public information and input events.

The first Molokai Community Plan was adopted in 1984 and was updated last in 2001. That plan was supposed to last until this year, when a new update would be created. However, that schedule is about two years behind, and the new update is projected to be completed in 2012.

Survival of the Fittest

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Jason Lester is always seeking bigger and better athletic challenges. That drive has led him to plan the EPIC5 Challenge – five Ironman events in five days on five Hawaiian Islands. The triathlete has been planning the course for years. Starting on Kauai, the event will come to Molokai on its third day, this Friday, May 7.

On each island, Lester and his training partner, Richard Roll, will swim 2.4 miles, bike 112 miles and run 26 miles. The event, described as “an unprecedented athletic and spiritual odyssey” is the first of its kind. The course will cover Kauai, Oahu, Molokai, Maui and Hawaii Island in that order, beginning on May 5.

Poetry Protégés

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Poetry Protégés

Keiki took to the mic during this month’s Read to Me program at the Molokai Public Library. It was an evening of poetry, as verses were read aloud to a young and enthusiastic audience. Kumu Alestra Menendez of Kilohana Elementary led keiki in writing their own poetry in a form called a cinquain poem, consisting of five lines revolving around one subject. The students then sat in the author’s chair and read their poems aloud. Above, participants (left to right) Meredith, Gus, Shaelynn (with mic), Xiomara and Maia (front) join in a team effort to read Meredith’s poem.

Island to Island

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Island to Island

With a flourish of feathers and face paint, a Pacific cultural group called Ariw Poenipan performed for the Molokai community last week. The group hails from the Torres Strait Islands between Australia and Papua New Guinea. Known for their authentic cultural performances, theirs is an oral culture preserved through passing on stories, traditions, music and dance. Molokai got to see a glimpse of this in front of the Public Library. Pictured above, dancers display the elaborate, hand-made headdresses and “dance machines” they are famous for. The props are not only cultural significant, but assist the dancer keep rhythm as they manipulate the moving parts, creating sound effects.


To illustrate that the challenges they face in the Torres Strait are similar to those encountered globally, leader Jeff Aniba-Waia explained that because of global warming, many of their low-lying islands are in danger from rising water levels. The group’s name, Ariw Poenipan, refers to the electrifying lightening that pierces the rain, and the echoing thunder of the monsoon season.

Bombs to Beauty

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Bombs to Beauty

Ilio Point on Molokai’s northwestern tip has seen its share of earth shattering events – literally. Acquired by the U.S. Navy in 1940 as an aerial bombing range, the area still has so many unexploded ordinances that access is prohibited. Ilio Point, despite the devastation, is rich in rare plants and animals, cultural sites and archeological specimens. Because of that, the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR) Natural Area Reserves (NARS) Commission has recommended the area for designation as a Natural Area Reserve.

The proposed area consists of 261 acres of state land that is not designated to any specific department. The state’s deed on the land currently prohibits access because of the unexploded ordinances, and the NARS designation would not change that, or affect native gathering rights, according to Emma Yuen, NARS Enhancement Coordinator.  However, part of the goal of the NARS designation is to remove safety hazards from the area.

Ilio Point is home to seabird species, the endangered Hawaiian monk seal and many native and rare plants. Fossilized goose bones and snail shells of now-extinct species have also been found in the area.

If designated, the land would be preserved in perpetuity, according to Bill Evanson, District Natural Area Program Manager. Final approval of the NARS designation is up to the Governor.

“It needs to be protected,” said Molokai resident and Hawaiian plants specialist Bill Garnett. “It’s one little place on Molokai where it still is what it used to be.”

Garnett and others testified at a public hearing about the proposed Ilio Point reserve held on Molokai last week.

Resident Halona Kaopuiki explained his family’s history in the area and the cultural important of preserving access to Ilio. 

“We’re talking about access. We have burials out there,” he said.

Yama Kaholoaa, Sr. expressed apprehension about the plan because it is not community initiated. He testified about the knowledge and resources of Molokai residents that are left unused, and said he hoped a plan for Ilio Point would be developed in close communication with the community.

“It should be the native Hawaiians that take care of the native species,” Kaholoaa said.

There are two other Natural Area Reserves on Molokai already – Pu`u Ali`i and Oloku`i on the island’s north central shore. The last NAR in the state was designated in 1991.

Another public hearing will be this Wednesday, Nov.. 18 from 6-8 p.m. at the Mitchell Pauole Center.

Live Video: Senate Discusses Alternatives to Furloughs

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Watch live as the Senate discuess alternatives so Furlough Fridays via the Honolulu Advertiser courtesy of 'Olelo Community Television:

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/99999999/MOGULUS02/399990001&template=mogulus

KP2 Declared Blind

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

KP2 Declared Blind

Molokai seal not to be released into the wild.

After a medical exam at Waikiki Aquarium last week, KP2, the young Hawaiian monk seal that had made Kaunakakai Wharf his home, was found to have cataracts. Veterinarians declared the seal to be 80 percent blind; with such limited eyesight, biologists say he’s unlikely to survive in the wild.

NOAA officials removed KP2 from Molokai waters two weeks ago. He was taken to Waikiki Aquarium for a thorough health inspection before a planned release into waters around Niihau. But after learning of the seal’s eye condition, NOAA has cancelled KP2’s release and are instead discussing relocation to either Sea Life Park on Oahu or a mainland aquarium.

Some Molokai residents want KP2 returned to the island.  They are outraged that NOAA removed the seal with very little public notice.  Activist Walter Ritte led about a dozen residents to Oahu Wednesday to protest at Waikiki Aquarium. The group wants NOAA to build a sanctuary for the seal on Molokai. But officials say the idea is not logistically plausible. 

Dr. Carmen Colitz, a veterinary specialist flown to Hawaii to examine KP2, said she believes KP2 developed cataracts so young because of a nutritional deficiency from never from his mother. KP2 was abaondonned by his mother at 24 hours old and raised by NOAA specialists for eight months. He is the first considered the first hand-reared Hawaiian monk seal.

KP2 was released in Kalaupapa last November and a few months later, appeared at the Kaunakakai Wharf. He became friendly with humans, playing with children in the water. In June, NOAA transported him back to Kalaupapa, hoping he would socialize with other young seals and “stay wild.” However, in just two days, KP2 was back at the wharf and socializing with the only friends he knows -- people.

NOAA specialists say KP2 was relocated from Molokai for safety reasons. They worried that as he reached sexual maturity, his play would become rougher and potentially dangerous. Incidents of nipping people and holding them under water were already reported.

KP2 is currently under quarantine at Waikiki Aquarium until plans are made for his future.

KP2 Seal Taken from Molokai Yesterday

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

By Catherine Cluett

KP2, the young Hawaiian monk seal that had made Kaunakakai Wharf his home, was taken from the area by NOAA yesterday morning. He is currently being held at Waikiki Aquarium for a thorough medical exam, according to NOAA biologist David Schofield. Schofield would not say how long KP2 would remain at the aquarium or what the next move might be.

The community has mixed feelings about the seal’s departure. NOAA has discussed relocating KP2 to Ka`ula Rock near Niihau west of Kauai. Karen Holt of the Molokai Community Service Council said she is worried about the seal’s safety.

“The tiger shark population in the Ka'ula area is large and aggressive,” she explained.

Holt said she hopes that NOAA would do enough research to be able to assure those who had come to love KP2 that he would be safe.