Community

General news which affects the Molokai community in one way or another.

Acts of Kindness

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Acts of Kindness

Oprah’s call for “random acts of kindness” is alive and well on Molokai. I advertised a van for sale and a father with eight children came to look at the van. When he saw my yard with overgrown grass and pile of debris and rubbish left by former occupants, the father offered to clean up the piles and cut the grass. With sadness I responded “I have no money to pay you.” He replied, “That’s ok, I have lots of children to help.”
Two days later I returned from town and to my delight and surprise the whole gang was working away mowing and piling brush, etc. on their pickups, and little girls were raking up the grass. I went to help put the stickery brush on the pickups and a young boy said to me with a big smile, “you go rest, we can do this.”
This great-grandmother has been suffering from arthritis and I had prayed to be able to clean up this place. Part of my belief is cleanliness and order in and around our homes and premises. Can you imagine a beautiful island with no rubbish and old cans. Wow! The children worked so cheerfully and enjoyed doing kindness. I felt very humbled and searched the home for little gifts as a reward for a hard job well done.

Constance Jenkins

Life of the Land

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Life of the Land

Community Contributed

By G.T. Larson

The single, most important event in the history of Molokai has been the arrival of humans. Not the first coconut that floated ashore and sprouted, nor the first bird that took wing from some distant shore and alighted upon a local lava ledge. Not the first plant seed attached by some means to the aforementioned bird, which fell off and took root – none of these affected the life of this land as much as that first sailing canoe that appeared off Molokai’s shoreline.

As best as can be determined with no written historical records, Polynesians probably arrived in the Hawaiian Islands in the sixth or seventh centuries A.D. Halawa Valley was most likely the first permanent settlement on Molokai and possibly in all of Hawaii. At first, these early pioneers partook of the sea’s bounty, but the land offered very little in the way of food for humans. These early explorers came prepared for just this possible scenario. Fruit and vegetable plants were planted and chickens and pigs were introduced into the environment to supplement seafood. Along with the intended cargo were undoubtedly some unintended stowaways, such as the Polynesian Roof Rat.

When a forest bird builds its nest to raise its young, it changes the forest environment. These changes, if kept in balance, at the least, have a neutral effect on the natural world; at best, a positive effect. Nature has an inherent balance that allows flora and fauna to flourish. The early Hawaiians affected their new home by their “nest building,” but humans have a tendency to build larger and more complicated nests. The extensive taro walls and stream diversion ditches in Halawa Valley and the many fish ponds along Molokai’s south shore show a remarkable level of engineering, but all this comes at a cost. The flora and fauna of Halawa?s valley floor has been permanently altered.


To some extent this is the way it has to be, for humans are a part of the circle of the life of the land and we need nourishment just like the birds and the bees. The early Hawaiians knew that the `aina would provide for them as long as they preserved the `aina. This was not a perfect protection, for not all those feathers on the feather capes of the ali`is were collected by catch and release. Thousands of forest birds, including many not found today, died for man’s pride. It’s one thing to eat a bird for dinner, and quite another to wear birds to dinner.

For the most part, the early Hawaiians interaction with the natural world can probably be summed up best by a quote by Hawaiian Charlie Keau: “We knew about pollution, we knew about preservation, we knew about the environment long before the Westerners forgot about it, because we had to live with what we had here. If we disturb any of the environment, we have no place to run and hide. This is our home.” May we all take care of our home. Aloha.

Show Your Face on Facebook

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Show Your Face on Facebook

Molokai Dispatch News Release

The Molokai Dispatch is trying to strengthen the Molokai community through technology. Our goal is to get more news to more people using the networking website Facebook as a tool – especially our local Molokai readers. And we need your help to make these connections.

Getting connected to the Dispatch on Facebook and suggesting your friends do the same will allow us to better serve readers, through creating an instantaneous two-way conversation about news on Molokai. We will provide the latest news, and fans can keep us updated on their own events and suggestions on what we should cover.

Follow these simple steps to become a fan of the Molokai Dispatch.
1.    Go to www.facebook.com and sign in or sign up (if you’re not already a part of this network, it’s a great way to keep in touch with family and friends, and well as The Molokai Dispatch)
2.    Type “Molokai Dispatch” into the search field at the top. Molokai Dispatch page will probably be the first match. Click on it.
3.    At the top of the page, you’ll see a “Like” bottom. Click on it.
4.    Under the Dispatch profile picture, click “Suggest to Friends.” Select all or click on all those you think appropriate. 

Congratulations, now you’re a fan of our page and will receive daily updates in your newsfeed. We hope you interact with you more, so please leave your comments, make story suggestions, join in our Facebook Mana`o’s and discuss our stories with your friends. 

Aunty’s Corner

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Aunty’s Corner

Aloha Aunty here.  Wow, Lono told me that Uncle Herb, Aunty Julia, DJ and his halau and others will be on the Travel Channel, Jan. 23, at 4 p.m.  The program is called “In The Wild.”  What a great honor for everyone involved and for Molokai! Aunty and Uncle have such a beautiful place on the fish pond.  I could stay there forever but I’m afraid Uncle might make me catch a fish and bite it like I saw him do once.  He did teach me how to make a fire in the imu which I thought was great fun.

I had to go to Honolulu for a doctor’s appointment.  It was during that horrible rain storm.  I wasn’t sure if I was going to get out but I must say that Mokulele pilots were really great.  They got us going and not really late.  I have to say a great mahalo to the young man that worked the check-in desk, as he helped me get on the plane when it looked like it might be too full.  He was terrific.  I arrived at my doctor’s appointment and who should be in the waiting room but everyone from Molokai.  We all laughed because none of us had met before. 

The students at Aka`ula School are going to Japan.  What a wonderful opportunity for them.  I tell them that when I was in school there was no such thing as students going on field trips to other states, let alone to a foreign country.  I wish I could go to school now.  Everything seems so much more interesting than when I went to school, especially our geography teacher who didn’t like kids and told us so every morning.  Speaking of school, I got all As from my classes.  I wish they were offering more classes like the ones I took.  Perhaps next fall.  Mahalo Todd and the Dispatch for that wonderful opportunity.


Stop in at Kalele Bookstore and ask to see the arbor.  Teri has trained her lilikoi vine to go over the frame.  It is a wonderful place to sit under and read a book, daydream or talk story.

They’ve started working on the St. Damien Church! It’s so exciting.  Father Clyde always said we’d have mass for Christmas.  Looks like he was right on.  I went over to give Sister Jessie’s and there was Father in bibbed overalls.  I almost didn’t know who he was because he’s never dressed like that.

Exciting to have the Cookhouse back open.  They make the best bacon burger ever! I recommend you share it with someone.  Take care, drive careful in the rain and come talk with me here at the Dispatch sometime.  God bless, Aunty Kapua

Affordable Homes for All

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Affordable Homes for All

Seven families on Molokai are about to own their own houses for the first time.

Molokai Affordable Homes and Community Development, a nonprofit organization on-island, is helping families on Molokai by facilitating low interest mortgages and support in building houses. A grant from the Department of Agriculture Rural Development (USDA-RD) has launched the program, intended for self-help housing, for those in an income bracket too much to qualify for Habitat for Humanity, but struggle to qualify for a regular mortgage, according to organization founder David Finley.

Shirley Burrows inherited a homestead lot in Ho`olehua from her mother when she passed away in 2003, but hasn’t been able to afford a loan to begin building. Now she and her husband, Leonard, are watching their home take shape.

“It’s the middle class people that fall through the cracks,” she said at a recent group meeting, where all the participants saw their home’s plans for the first time. “It’s nice something captures us.”

She was encouraged by her sister, Suliana Aki, who is also in the program.

“This group makes a big difference in keeping [me] motivated,” Shirley said.

kids, something that’s theirs.”

Lani said she is excited for the physical part of this journey.

“I’m looking forward to the first pounding of the nail,” Lani said. “This is a good group.”

If you are interested in helping these families, or want more information on the affordable home program, call 553-8141.

Mobi is Mo Betta

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Three new cell phone towers were recently installed on top of the Wilhelm Center, where Paddlers Inn is located, to ensure better service for Mobi PCS customers.The cell phone towers, which were approved by the Molokai Planning Commission last June, enhanced Mobi’s 3G network through Kaunakakai, Kualapu`u and Kakahai`a, according to a news release.Mobi has been serving Hawaii since 2003, and serves Molokai through Molokai Cellular, located in the G&M Variety building in Kaunakakai.“We like to think we are the local pulse of the community,” Ed Kurzenski said, Chief Technical Officer of Mobi PCS.

Tutu’s Corner

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

The Nature Conservancy News Release

 The Nature Conservancy has received a $10,000 grant from the Monsanto Fund for its conservation work on the island of Molokai.

Thanks to a strong recommendation from Ray Foster, general manager for Monsanto Molokai, the Monsanto Fund awarded the grant to the Conservancy’s Molokai programs to support watershed and stream management.


“On behalf of the Molokai staff, I would like to thank Monsanto and Ray Foster for their continued support of the Conservancy during these tough economic times,” said Ed Misaki, director of Molokai programs for the Conservancy. Monsanto has provided the Conservancy with annual grants totaling $95,000 since 2005.

According to Misaki, the funds will be used for watershed and stream management at its Kamakou and Pelekunu preserves. The two preserves, which total almost 9,000 acres, lie within the greater East Molokai watershed.  

The $10,000 gift will also serve as private matching funds for the state Natural Area Partnership Program, or NAPP.  The state program provides $2 for every private dollar the Conservancy raises and spends on management activities at Kamakou and Pelekunu.  Essentially, Monsanto’s gift will leverage an additional $20,000 in NAPP funding for a total of $30,000.

 


New Year’s Eve

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

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