Wainiha hui kūʻai ʻāina ancestral lands forever a moʻolelo of kānaka and ʻāina persistence

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2013-08
Authors
Solis, Sheleigh Christina Kaahiki
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[Honolulu] : [University of Hawaii at Manoa], [August 2013]
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Abstract
The connection between genealogy and land is an important aspect of Hawaiian culture. The Hawaiian Methodology used in researching the minutes of the Hui Kūʻai ʻĀina o Wainiha looks at 23 years of a primary source hand written Hawaiian language document. My research tells a moʻolelo of a land hui in Wainiha, Kauaʻi. They practiced traditional methods of land governance by creating their own Kumukānāwai. They used traditional laws and cultural methods such as: practicing the use of palena or boundary making; kālaiʻāina-dividing out the land; placing kapu on specific fish and plants in their valley; kuleana-practicing responsibility and concern for each other and the land; and the use of hoʻoponopono or balance as a way of living their lives. Culminating in the best practice methods of land and resource management used by this group. This is the story of the Kanei ʻohana-a moʻolelo makaʻāinana shared by a lineal descendent.
Description
M.A. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2013.
Includes bibliographical references.
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Nā Hoʻoponopono, genealogy, Kanei ʻohana
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Theses for the degree of Master of Arts (University of Hawaii at Manoa). Hawaiian Studies.
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