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I Ola Kanaloa | A Kanaloa Kahoʻolawe Fundraising Farm Dinner

Updated: May 18

Date: December 14, 2024

Location: Nāulu Farm


I Ola Kanaloa: Life to Kanaloa



I Ola Kanaloa


Aloha Makena hosted a benefit dinner at Mākena Golf & Beach Club's Nāulu Farm honoring local organizations Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana and Kahoʻolawe Island Reserve Commission for their critical work towards supporting Kanaloa Kahoʻolawe and I Ola Kanaloa - life to Kanaloa. Our intention for this event is to come together on this side of Honuaʻula and ʻAlalākeiki channel to echo, reflect, and resonate the health and vitality of Kanaloa spaces: the ocean, wind currents, particular marine life, underground fresh water, and ancestral knowledge.

 

​This event included delicious food and drink, live entertainment by Marja Lehua Apisaloma and Gilbert Emata, and beautiful views of Puʻu Ōlaʻi and Kahoʻolawe beyond.

​All proceeds from the event directly benefitted the honorees.





Register with The Protect Kaho’olawe ‘Ohana

The Protect Kaho’olawe ‘Ohana was founded in 1976 to lead an islandswide grassroots aloha ʻāina movement of Native Hawaiians and Hawaiʻi residents with a focus on ending the U.S. Navy’s military abuse and use of Kaho’olawe and to heal the islands's natural and cultural resources.  In 1977, two ‘Ohana members, George Jarrett Helm and James Kimo Mitchell, disappeared in the ocean off of Kaho‘olawe during a peaceful occupation protesting the bombing. As a result of a civil suit, Aluli vs. Brown, military exercises ended in 1990 and the island was returned to the State of Hawaiʻi in 1994. The movement that grew around the island eventually expanded across the pae ʻāina, activating Native Hawaiian communities to embrace the kuleana of a cultural stewardship of Hawaiian lands. The ‘Ohana now works with the Kaho’olawe Island Reserve Commission through the Palapala ʻAelike Kahuʻāina (Stewardship Agreement) to access Kaho’olawe and serve as stewards of its natural and cultural resources. For more information, visit www.protectkahoolaweohana.org


Registration is now closed.



Register with KIRC

Administratively attached to the state Department of Land and Natural Resources, the Kaho‘olawe Island Reserve Commission (KIRC) was established by the Hawai‘i State Legislature in 1993 to manage the Kaho‘olawe Island Reserve while it is held in trust for a future Native Hawaiian sovereign entity. Its mission is to implement the vision for Kaho‘olawe Island in which the kino (body) of Kaho‘olawe is restored and nā poʻe o Hawaiʻi (the people of Hawaiʻi) care for the land. The Commission has pledged to provide for the meaningful and safe use of Kaho‘olawe for the purpose of the traditional and cultural practices of the native Hawaiian people and to undertake the restoration of the island and its waters. The organization is managed by a seven-member Commission and a committed staff. For more information, call (808) 243.5020 or visit www.kahoolawe.hawaii.gov.


Registration is now closed.





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