History

Stories about Molokai’s rich cultural history.

A Royal Celebration

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

A Royal Celebration

The year was 1921. Delegate to Congress for the Territory of Hawaii, and former heir to the throne of the Kingdom of Hawaii, Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalaniana`ole sat on the first Hawaiian Homestead Commission. Tired of seeing native Hawaiians struggle to adapt to Western living culture – where urban living ruled – Kuhio helped create the Hawaiian Homelands Act, giving back the ancient relationship Hawaiians share with their `aina.

The first few years of the program were to figure out how to make it successful – and the majority of the acreage released was on Molokai. This “case in point” divided up 23 lots of 25 acres each, and was called Kalaniana’ole Settlement after Kuhio – a name that still exists today in nearby Kalaniana’ole Road and Kalaniana’ole Hall.

The courageous challenge by Molokai settlers to farm on such “dry and almost barren wastes” was seen as a great success, and the homestead program continues to this day.

As Molokai gathers to celebrate the first native Hawaiian to serve Congress, and the only royal-born in Congress’ history, the day dedicated to him is full of Hawaiian, food, crafts and entertainment. A modern homestead association, Ahupua’a o Molokai, is hosting the Prince Kuhio Day celebration at Kiowea Park at Coconut Grove, Saturday, March 27 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Aunty’s Corner

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Aunty’s Corner

Aloha Aunty Here Again,

My dear friend Kealoha has left for the frozen north in Chicago.  She called to say she misses the green, swaying palm trees. Kealoha and I went to Coffees of Hawaii the weekend before she left so she could say goodbye to Ohana Hoaloha.  It was aunty Ku’ulei’s birthday and we were graced with the Junior Song Leader for the Kamehameha School Contest. We also went to the bazaar at the Middle School.  Thank goodness I didn’t take more money.  I bought oranges, papaya, mochi, and a flower for my hair.  From there we went to Maunaloa for Music Saturday with Lono at the Kite Shop.  It was so cool to see so many people there.  I needed at jacket because it was so cold and Aunty Jan whipped one off the rack and gave it to me.  I was so surprised.  I gave her a donation.  She said everything is free but I told her I wanted to share the aloha she has by my donation for those who can’t.

I have never seen so many people come in for passport photos here.  I guess the Philippine Consulate is arriving in a few weeks and they need to get passports updated.  Such nice people to talk with.  I so love to meet new people.  Tina and Steve are going to Germany, Hong Kong, and S. China.  Steve will be working with the governments regarding solid waste to energy and water clarification.

Our really cute young women who work here have decided to get some more tattoos.  Kim had her foot done, Heather had one behind her ear and Megan had one on her shoulder.  Guess I started a trend.  Now I want another one. 

I am every excited about the Kamehameha School Guitar Club coming to Molokai to give a concert on April 24th at 4 p.m. at Home Pumehana for all the community.  There may be three Molokai boys coming to play with the club.  I’ll let you know the names when they are confirmed.  We have some new residents that have moved in: Uncle Jessie, Aunty Mele, Uncle Tom, and Aunty Sharon.  Welcome to you all.  I absolutely love to sit and listen to my aunties that live around me talk story.  I am surprised at how many had danced hula in their younger years.

Alulike’s Uncle Clarence made so ono bread pudding.  I hope that Heaven has bread pudding.  It is my all time favorite dessert.  Mahalo, Uncle. You are welcome to make some for me, hint, hint. 

Our Punana Leo language classes have been on hold for several weeks.  I went to the first class last night.  Stress, stress, but it turned out to be a meeting for their fund raiser Ho’omau 2010 on April 10th at the Lanikeha Center.  I’m helping Miliopuna sell tickets, $2 each.  Come see me and I’ll sell some to you.  They have some really great prizes.  

Well, I guess I’ve babbled on long enough.  I love talking to you all.  Remember to send me your ideas.  Me Kealoha Pumehana, Aunty

Veterans of Italy Tour

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Association of Descendents of Veterans of WWII Italian Campaign will tour Italy and the American battlefield cemeteries during September 2010.

Veterans, their families, children and grandchildren will visit Rome, Venice, Florence, Pisa, Cassino, Salerno and the military cemeteries at Florence and Anzio-Nettuno to honor and to remember those 24,000 combat soldiers and Navy men who gave up their lives in the battle against the Nazis in 1943-1945.

For information call the association at 561-865-8495.

Close-Up with the Close-Up Keiki

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Close-Up with the Close-Up Keiki

After a rocky start, which included 12-hours of delays through Honolulu and Chicago, the Close Up group made it to Washington D.C. on March 13!

The group of 17 keiki has visited quite a bit of D.C.! The White House – although they weren’t able to go inside – memorials, some of the Smithsonian Museums, and met with Hawaii’s Senators Inouye and Akaka and Represenative Hirono.

Check out their photos and the messages straight from the students’ mouth: at the Close Up website.

 

What Does a Veteran Mean to You?

Friday, March 12th, 2010

What Does a Veteran Mean to You?

Community Contributed

By Larry Helm

The Molokai Veteran Association held a contest, asking keiki ages eight to 10 “What a veteran means to you.” Two winners were selected, Michelle McGuire and Kade Apuna, both fourth graders at Kualapu`u Elementary and who each won a bike! The bikes were donated by Paul Laud of Bicyle Recycle on Maui. Laud is the president of Maui County Veterans Council. Below are their winning essays.

Kade Apuna
To me, a veteran is a hero. They are the men and women who give their lives for our country and our freedom. I know lots of veterans and some of them are my papas and uncles and I think they are heroes because they are special people to me.

Michelle McGuire
A veteran is a person who fought for my freedom. A veteran is brave. If they had to, they went away from their family and could have been killed, but went for all of us. I believe in the veterans. My Grandpa was a veteran. Even though I did not know him, he fought for me and my family.

The Nine Sides of Father Damien

Friday, March 5th, 2010

The Nine Sides of Father Damien

While a picture is known to be worth a thousand words, for some it can also be worth a thousand memories. For her latest mixed media artwork project, Molokai born and raised Paula Mondoy Scott relied on personal experiences from her childhood and plenty of research to create nine original pieces. The works of art represent different aspects of Father Damien and Kalaupapa.

Scott grew up in Kalae, just a few miles from the peninsula, and while she didn’t visit until the required age of 16, she was connected to the history-rich settlement from birth. Her father, John Mondoy, would often go down to play music for the patients, and she had some aunties and uncles work at the settlement.

One New Year’s Eve, “I was dancing all night with the patients,” she said. She also met Richard Marks, who was “instrumental” in patient advocacy.

,” she said.

Scott said her key points of inspiration were the children Saint Damien worked with; his advocacy – “even to the point of becoming unpopular with the diocese” – and his work as a healer.

Scott is well-researched in the life of Saint Damien, which led her to know a little about another famous Kalaupapa healer – Mother Marianne Cope. When visiting Hawaii last month for her father’s birthday, Scott was in Oahu for the dedication of a Mother Marianne statue.

“I’m getting a nudge from the universe to do a body of work on Mother Mary,” Scott said

Scott created a blog many years ago called Molokai Girl, to broaden her audience for her artwork. All her work, including the process of making her Father Damien series, is available at her blog.

New Kalaniana’ole Hall Opens its Doors

Friday, February 26th, 2010

New Kalaniana’ole Hall Opens its Doors

Upon completion of Kalaniana'ole Hall's restoration efforts, several Molokai community members gathered to witness its blessing on Tuesday, Feb. 9 in Kalama'ula.

Plans to renovate the historic building were first brought forth in 2003. The organization Friends of Kalaniana'ole immediately jumped on board with financial support, mustering grants from the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) and the Molokai Enterprise Community (EC), as well as help from the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands (DHHL), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Rural Development, Lokahi Pacific and other groups.

is going to be used for meetings and funerals," Venenciano said. "It's what it was used for in the past, so we need to stay close to that and retain that value."

Originally, the historic Kalaniana'ole Hall, built in 1937, was used for funeral services, overnight vigils and 'ohana viewings, as well as parties, weddings, hula contests and weekend movies. In 2003 its significant history was addressed when the state recognized the hall in the Hawaii Register of Historic Places.

Since its opening, the hall has already been used a few times by the community. On Jan. 7, Kalaniana'ole Hall was used by the USDA Rural Development during its roundtable discussion with Molokai residents regarding the economy. Stacy Crivello, a member of the EC Governance Board, said in a statement that it was appropriate for the USDA to utilize the hall because of its contributions to the renovation.

As for its future, Venenciano sees it as a refreshing continuation of a historical entity.

"It is a celebration of our history," he said.


Special Mahalo To:
 
Ke Aupuni Lokahi Board of Directors and Staff; Hale O Na Ali'i O Hawaii Halau O Kawananakoa; Board of Trustees, Office of Hawaiian Affairs; Mr. Albert Tiberi, Office of Hawaiian Affairs; Mr. William Akutagawa, Friends of Kalaniana'ole; Mr. Hardy Spoehr, Community Development Pacific; Mr. Glenn Mason, Mason Architects; Mr. Lester Delos Reyes, Hawaii National Guard; Ms. Kamaile Sombelon, Lokahi Pacific; Mr. Fred Bailey and Sons Electric, Contractor; Mr. Sandy Stein, Contractor; Ms. Irene Lam, USDA Rural Development; Mr. Darrel Yagodich, DHHL, Planning Department; Mr. George Maioho, Mr. Larry Sagario and DHHL Staff; Mr. Steven Arce, COM, Public Works; Mr. Peter Nicholas, Molokai Properties Ltd., Mr. Adolph Helm, Mycrogen Seed Company; Order of Kamehameha, Maui Chapter; Kalama'ula Homestead Association; Mr. Richard & Mrs. Kanani Negrillo & O'hana; Mr. Henry & Mrs. Rose-Allen Paleka; Mr. Brent Davis, Davis & Sons; and Mr. Dolphin Pawn, Akamai Tree Trimming.

An Irresistible Force

Friday, December 11th, 2009

An Irresistible Force

As the global focus on Saint Damien begins to lessen, Molokai knows full well the island has another divine resident to be proud of: Blessed Mother Marianne. The woman who comforted Saint Damien in his last months became the leader in spirit of the Kalaupapa community after his passing.

Mother Marianne is currently on her last step to canonization – she was beatified in 2005 – and two important figures in her cause wrote an extensive biography of her life, released last month, called “Pilgrimage and Exile: Mother Marianne of Moloka`i.”

“The main purpose of the book is to share the life and virtue of Mother Marianne, the inspirational and motivating story of a life lived by a woman who had extraordinary gifts and talents and yet gave her all to serve the poorest of the poor because of her love of God and neighbor,” wrote one of the authors, Sister Mary Laurence Hanley, O.S.F., via email.

Sister Hanley is one of the four members of the Historical Commission for the Cause of Mother Marianne. Her co-author, the late Dr. O.A. Bushnell, also a member of the cause committee, wrote several books and historical novels about the Hawaiian Islands, including “Moloka`i,” a story of the Hansen’s disease patients at Kalaupapa.

In the course of her canonization research on Mother Marianne, Sister Hanley updated her original book of the same name, written 20 years ago.

Sister Hanley was first inspired by another biography she read about Mother Marianne, affectionately known to her congregation as the “Beloved Mother of Outcasts.”
 
“It had adventure and a great heroine and it was a call for courage. I decided to become a Franciscan sister and thought about going to help patients at Molokai,” Sister Hanley said.

She instead became a teacher, and eventually her research skills led her to be the director of Mother Marianne’s Cause for canonization in her congregation.

The book delves into surprisingly in-depth details of Marianne’s life, including her family’s decision to move to America and their reactions, the exchanges between the Catholic Mission in Hawaii and Mother Marianne’s order prior to the sisters arrival, and direct quotes from the patients in pidgin when the sisters worked at Kaka`ako.

Molokai’s Mother
Mother Marianne was born Barbara Koob (also Kob, Kopp, and now officially Cope) on January 23, 1838 in Germany. Her family moved to Utica, New York the following year and she became a naturalized citizen as a teenager. She expressed a desire to dedicate her life to God at a young age and entered the Sisters of Saint Francis in Syracuse, N.Y at age 24.
Sister Marianne worked as a nurse-administrator at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Syracuse beginning in 1870 – starting a long career as a healer of bodies as well as souls. She was elected Provincial Superior in 1877, a title she kept for the rest of her life.

In 1883 she received a letter from the Catholic Mission in the Hawaiian Islands asking for nurses and schoolteachers. After a few months, she wrote back with high conviction of her decision.

“I am hungry for the work and I wish with all my heart to be one of the chosen Ones, whose privilege it will be, to sacrifice themselves for the salvation of the souls of the poor islanders…I am not afraid of any disease, hence it would be my greatest delight even to minister to the abandoned lepers,” wrote Mother Marianne, as quoted in “Pilgrimage and Exile.”

She move to Kaka`ako Hospital in Honolulu where she saved many lives by instituting the then-unknown ideas of sterilization and sanitation. When the hospital closed, she and several sisters were finally able to join Father Damien at Kalaupapa in 1888. She stayed for the rest of her life. Like Saint Damien, Mother Marianne has a grave marker in Kalaupapa, near the Bishop Home for Girls where she worked.

The canonization committee’s website, http://blessedmariannecope.org/, has more information on the ongoing project for the canonization of Mother Marianne.