Community

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

75 Years of Education

Friday, June 11th, 2010

75 Years of Education

Nestled in the foothills of Molokai’s east end peaks, Kilohana School has been a community anchor for 75 years. This summer, the community is gathering in celebration of a long and successful education legacy on July 3. The all-day event will feature a ho`olaulea from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. and a lu`au from 6 to 9 p.m.

Crafts, games, ono food, produce and entertainment at the ho`olaulea promises fun for the whole ohana, while the lu`au will include dinner and a show, along with a host of other entertainment throughout the evening.

Kilohana 75th Anniversary T-shirts are available for $15, DVDs of Kilohana’s history made by Kilohana students are on sale for $7 and lu`au tickets are $20. All proceeds go to the Kilohana School Community Organization.

Zessica Apiki of the anniversary planning committee said ticket sales are selling quickly. Almost 200 of the 400 tickets available for the lu`au event have already been sold. Tickets will be sold through the ho`olaulea that day, but will not be available at the door for the lu`au.

The VIP guest list for the event includes two alumni who attended the school when it began in 1934, as well as County and Department of Education officials.

“I feel like all of a sudden I’ve become part of this history,” said Richard Stevens, who is concluding his first year as principal of Kilohana and an active member of the event committee. He added that the Kilohana Bazaar held a few weeks ago raised $20,000 for the school and he has high hopes for the anniversary event.

Contact Zess at 553-5446, Edwina at 558-8222, or Moses at 558-8143 to purchase lu`au tickets. Tickets will also be available on select Saturdays in front of Friendly Market Center.

Honoring Their Memory

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Honoring Their Memory

M

On the morning of Memorial Day, May 31, Molokai Veterans Caring for Veterans held a larger service attended at Ho`olehua Veterans Cemetery, where 179 veterans are laid to rest. Many headstones that morning were adorned with lei, bouquets and fruit, and at each grave site an American flag was planted and rippled in the strong breeze.

This was the first year the group held their service at the cemetery, which will also host their Veterans Day ceremony on November 11. Manuel Garcia, a Vietnam veteran who represents Molokai on the state’s Veteran Advisory Committee, said the move was meant to bring the ceremony closer to the veterans.

“This is where our veterans are at… we came to honor these people here,” Garcia said.

During the ceremony, Master Sergeant Samuel Makaiwi spoke about the sacrifice veterans and their families make. “Freedom is not free,” he said, gesturing to the gravesites.

Makaiwi retired last week after nearly 40 years of service, including two years in Iraq. His son is currently on his second tour of duty in Afghanistan.

“We’re there for a reason, so people in other counties can enjoy the freedoms we have and so we can sit here today with fear of being bombed,” Makaiwi said.

Louella Albino also spoke at the ceremony. Her husband of 43 years, Donald “Butch” Albino, fought in Vietnam and passed away in April after battling cancer. Doctors told him the disease resulted from exposure to Agent Orange.

“He was one of the soldiers that came home with the war,” Albino said.

While Memorial Day is only one day designated to recognize veterans, some think they should be acknowledged every day in one way or another.

“It could be just a simple aloha or talking story,” Ed Panui, who attended the ceremony in Kaunakakai, said. “Veterans should be celebrated every day.”

INFO MEETINGS FOR THE AGRICULTURAL LEADERSHIP PROGRAM

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

The Agricultural Leadership Foundation of Hawai‘i has posted on its website recruitment and application information about the next Class of its Agriculture Leadership Training Program: www.agleaderhi.org. All applications and letters of support must be received or postmarked no later than July 2, 2010. Want to know more about the Program? Attend an informational meeting on your island and learn more from alumni, the program directors and board members. For more information about these informational meetings, contact these alumni during work hours.

Informational Meeting Dates, Times, Locations, Contact Persons

Community Plan Kicks Off

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

The Molokai Dispatch had a chance to catch up with County of Maui Planner and former Molokai Staff Planner Nancy McPherson about a kick-off Open House event on June 26 to get the community involved in the Molokai Community Plan Update process.

Molokai Dispatch (MD): What can we expect for the open house?

Lost at Sea

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

It’s not every day you see a truck in the ocean. For a few waterside residents, their picturesque view of Molokai’s reef was obstructed lasy Tuesday evening, after a truck became stranded on the mudflats about 100 yards off the Coconut Grove shoreline in Kaunakakai.

The abandoned truck remained in the water for three days before finally being towed out by another truck with help from several family members of one resident. Shane Tabilangan, the truck’s operator, will be fined for unlawfully leaving the car in state waters, according to Keif Apo of the Department of Land and Natural Resources enforcement office on Molokai.

“He was given a few days to get it out, and they did,” Apo said. The amount of the fine will be decided pending a court date in June.

Molokai Pioneer and Humanitarian: Yun Kee Yuen

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Molokai Pioneer and Humanitarian: Yun Kee Yuen

Community Contributed

By Heidi Chang (granddaughter)

When Yun Kee Yuen opened the first pineapple plantation store on Molokai in the early 1920s, it soon became the hub of the community, and he did whatever he could to help make life more enjoyable for the plantation workers on Maunaloa.

Yun Kee, better known as Y. K., was an enterprising merchant, known for his aloha—always sharing whatever he had and trying to help people. He became a major merchant by the end of the 1930s, operating four grocery stores on the Friendly Island and making many important contributions to the community during those early plantation days. He came a long way for someone with only an elementary school education.

Born on May 7, 1898 in Manoa Valley in Honolulu, Y. K. was the eldest of five boys. His parents, Fong Yuk Yuen and Chun Shee Yuen, emigrated from Siu Yun Village in the Nam Long area of Chung Shan District in southern China.

mongst her latest work is a contribution to a new book "Chinese Pioneer Families of Maui, Molokai, and Lanai," published by the Hawaii Chinese History Center and distributed by University of Hawaii Press.

To contact Heidi email her at Heidi@HeidiChang.com. To order the book from University of Hawai‘i Press call (808) 956-8255, toll free 1-888-847-7377; email: uhpbooks@hawaii.edu; or order online at: www.uhpress.hawaii.edu.

Author’s note: Based on interviews of Y. K. Yuen’s four children (Lilyan Yuen Anderson, Jane Yuen Chang, Marybeth Yuen Maul, and John “Sonny” Yuen Sr.) by Heidi Chang.

‘Molokai Is’ Photo Contest

Friday, May 28th, 2010

‘Molokai Is’ Photo Contest

comments3 Comments

Molokai Middle School Cares about Health & Wellness

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Molokai Middle Schools Caring about Health & Wellness

Ruby in the Rough

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Ruby in the Rough

On Dec. 19, 2009, Ruby Villa-Nueva made a critical call that would reunite 10 family members to fulfill one purpose: to give back to the island of Molokai.

“It was a spiritual mission,” Villa-Nueva said of recently-opened Aunty Ruby’s Café on Ala Malama Avenue. “We all have a common interest in serving people. We wanted to use our different skills and bring back what was good.”

Eight of the 10 Villa brothers and sisters moved back to Molokai to pursue entrepreneurial endeavors, five of which moved back from Maui and Oahu within the last three months.

“I wasn’t going to [open a restaurant] if all 10 weren’t in,” added Villa-Nueva, co-owner of Aunty Ruby’s.

has definitely brought back the good food and feeling of the Mid Nite Inn,” Umi said. “It was family-run, too. I think people appreciate that.”

Even into the late evening hours, laughter beckons from the café doors, luring in passersby who long to join in on the celebration and consumption of delectable treats made by Royce Villa. His skills have landed him gigs all over the globe – especially for his wedding cake designs, which can be ordered through the café.

“I learned everything I know from my mom,” said Royce Villa, whose baking experience spans 15 years. “I also went to culinary school and traveled to many places where I’ve picked up on different techniques. I love making exquisite desserts with a bite.”

Within two months, the café plans to expand with a surprise addition – one that will utilize Royce’s baking talents.

Family Affair
The family connection with Ala Malama Avenue began long before Villa-Nueva became inspired to open a restaurant.

It was in 1975 that her grandparents, Julien and Louisa Torres, opened the Torres Thread Shop, occupying the same building as the café, but closed about five years later. Soon thereafter, Hop Inn, a classic Molokai eatery specializing in Chinese food, took over the building and gained local popularity throughout the heyday of pineapples. It closed some 20 years ago.

As fate would have it, the vacant rundown building, leased to the Villa `ohana by Union Leasing Corp, would become home to Aunty Ruby’s Café.

“The opportunity just opened up,” Villa-Nueva said. “It’s amazing, the timing, how it all came together.”

The Villas also have family ties with the Store House, a shop nestled alongside the café that offers wholesale goods, whose `ohana runs the establishment.

At Aunty Ruby’s, Umi said he hopes to blend all generations, leaving a Villa legacy.

“We have the first-generation mentors, but we have the second generation bringing in new, unique styles,” he said. “We want them to take their ideas and run with it.”

As for the recession that has seen the entire state littered with dead restaurants and vacant buildings? Umi said he hopes to see Aunty Ruby’s defy gravity by not only managing to survive the economic downturn, but by thriving.

“There is a recession all over but we choose not to be apart of it,” he added. “We want to bring healing to the community.”

Jockeying for Jobs

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Jockeying for Jobs

Young people looking for jobs and ways to build their resumes this summer will have help from the state government. The Summer Youth Employment Program, which Lt. Governor James “Duke” Aiona announced last week, will fund public service jobs for young people from low-income families across the state, including here on Molokai.

Jobs are available at federal, state or county government agencies or private non-profits and will pay at least $8 an hour.

While jobs created under the program may not be glamorous – typical office work includes filing, copying and answering telephones – Aiona said any time spent in an office offers valuable communication, writing and trade skills.

“You would really get a work experience you wouldn’t get in a normal job,” he said in an interview Saturday.

The program is open to people 14-23 who meet at least one of the following criteria: attend a Title I school (which includes Molokai High School); receive free or reduced price lunches; live in a household receiving public cash assistance or Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamp) benefits or with a gross annual income at or below 300 percent of the Federal Poverty Level for Hawaii.

Jobs will be created based on employee interest, though Aiona predicted most will be on Oahu, where there is a concentration of state and federal government offices. He encouraged people who are able to travel there for the summer to go.

Applications for workers and eligible agencies looking to hire under the program will be available at the Kaunakakai Civic Center from May 24 to September 30.

While the number of jobs will depend on participants and available funds, Aiona’s office expects nearly a thousand positions will be created statewide. The program is possible, Aiona said, because of “an infusion of funding” from the federal stimulus package. He does not anticipate it becoming an annual program.

“For now at least it’s a one time shot,” he said.

For more information visit the Workforce Development Division at Kaunakakai Civic Center (55 Makaena Pl.) or call 553-1755.