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of the ethical practices that educators in Hālau Kū Māna have sought to base their curriculum and educational programs. Aloha ʻāina reestablishes acceptance and implementation of traditional values and connects people back to the ʻāīna. Aloha ʻāina also expresses the commitment to the protection and maintenance of the wellbeing of the natural world and political autonomy. Sovereign pedagogies recognizes the importance of sovereignty on a personal and collective level for the wellbeing and learning of indigenous people. Pedagogies of aloha ʻāina implemented by educators in Hālau Kū Māna, have allowed students to cultivate meaningful relationships with the places they are visiting and working on, while at the same time examining and studying the natural world. ʻĀina-based pedagogies have also taught students to acknowledge and actively communicate with the ʻāina that is living, through chants, gifts, and work. As part of the holistic practice of aloha ʻāina in Hālau Kū Māna, educators engage students with contemporary
Hawaiian politics, to allow them to confront controversial social issues. Social movements in Hawaii can assure people who are marginalized and oppressed can secure authority over their educational futures. Aloha ʻāina has been a practice of Kanaka Maoli survivance that helped to develop the Hawaiian sovereignty movement. It is also part of the Hawaiian consciousness that is a symbol of cultural identity that helps to unite Hawaiians. The teaching, learning, and mastery of reading, writing, and printing for Hawaiians has enabled them to capture and preserve older knowledge forms that would have been lost. This has also helped to create new ways to express aloha ʻāina in new frameworks and rebuild the nation.
164:); therefore, anti-development and water rights struggles are ubiquitous elements of traditional kalo culture. Kalo culture relates directly to health issues; studies have shown very high rates of heart disease, diabetes, many cancers, and most other preventable, diet-related diseases among native Hawaiians, and a major factor in these statistics is suspected to be the abandonment of traditional dietary practices. The goals of Aloha ʻĀina include the harmonization of human health with the health of the land, through the culturally pono (righteous) protection and care of the natural resources that sustain it.
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educational experiences. This is essential in stripping away the colonial educational systems that have repressed Native
Hawaiian identity, knowledge, and culture. Place-based learning in charter schools have influenced Native Hawaiian learners experiences and success in school. Hawaiian schools have addressed educational inequalities, improved students' social emotional health, test scores, community and family engagement, and the underrepresentation of Native teachers and school leaders better than public schools.
45:, Professor at the Kamakakūokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies: “Aloha ‘āina is a relationship not just with the land but really with nature itself and in particular that part of the land and sea and streams and water that actually sustains life. ‘Āi is the word that means to eat and when we say ‘āina we’re talking basically about what it is that feeds not just humans but basically everything, and everything is directly dependent and interdependent with the ‘āina.”
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Hawaiian culture-based schools have been working towards restoring the holistic health of
Hawaiian communities and nationhood. Hālau Kū Māna is an accredited Hawaiian culture-based public charter school founded in 1999. As one of the foundations of the Hawaiian resistance, aloha ʻāina has been one
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in 1900, after the annexation of Hawaiʻi in the last decade of the 19th century. Since that time some connotations of
Hawaiian nationalism are associated with the term. Many practitioners, however, assert that Aloha ʻĀina is not itself a political term but rather a tenet of spiritual and cultural
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Today, Hawaiian culture-based education implements traditional
Hawaiian knowledge of ʻāina as a vital element to reconnect educators and students back to the ʻāina. The Native Hawaiian educational movement seeks to reestablish and reclaim Native Hawaiian cultural knowledge, land, and more positive
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Aloha ʻĀina also means
Hawaiian patriotism; love for the land and its people. It is an in-depth relationship between the places and communities that hold significance to the individual. As such, it is an ethic that includes striving to improve the well-being of Hawaiʻi and engaging in experiences
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on a surfboard, along with Kimo
Mitchell in an attempt to return to Kahoʻolawe. The pair disappeared and Helm's body was never found. The Navy later ended its use of Kaho'olawe and funded a still-incomplete program to remove unexploded ordnance from the island.
61:, stories and lifestyle practices such as farming, which have many celebratory and sometimes sensual elements. As a political term, it came into wide use during the late nineteenth century through the Aloha ʻĀina Party, which transformed into the
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at the time. The PKO planned to "complete five landings symbolizing the five fingers of limahana (the working hand)." A group of activists, kupuna (elders) and cultural practitioners led by
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and cultural orientations are founded upon a sense of being connected to all living things. This mutuality between all things exists on many levels: spiritual, social, and the scientific.
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and
Richard Sawyer, were left behind on the waterless island when the others were again removed. Helm, who had become the group's leader and a hero to many, paddled the 7 miles from
57:, which emphasize the connection between the land and the people. In everyday practice, it embodies a deep passion for the land, as is often demonstrated in songs,
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arose based upon it. Land struggles were the locus of this movement, which brought together ecological principles, ancient practices, historical interests,
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70:, 1977). These actions may be political, or may simply involve prayer, lifestyle choices and love and respect for the land and sea.
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The
Everything Family Guide To Hawaii Book: Lodging, Restaurants, Beaches, and Must-See Attractions for All Eight Islands
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Traditionally, the concept goes back to mythical times, and is illustrated extensively in creation chants such as the
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29:, which literally means "love of the land", is a central idea of Native Hawaiian thought, cosmology and culture.
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that foster aloha for and life-long allegiance to ka lāhui Hawaiʻi and ka pae ʻāina o Hawaiʻi. According to
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reached the island by boat, but were later arrested. They returned, and two of the group,
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The pinnacle of this movement came in 1976–77, with the occupation of the island of
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Noelani
Goodyear-Ka'ōpua; Ikaika Hussey; Erin Kahunawaika'ala Wright (2014).
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Pathways to the Present: U.S. Development and Its Consequences in the Pacific
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Pacific history: papers from the 8th Pacific History Association Conference
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The Aloha ʻĀina movement later focused on the growing of kalo, or Hawaiian
562:(2007). "Ike Aina: Native Hawaiian Culturally Based Indigenous Literacy".
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The Bases of Empire: The Global Struggle Against U.S. Military Posts
109:). Kahoʻolawe had been used as training area for the military since
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The Seeds We Planted: Portraits of a Native Hawaiian Charter School
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A Nation Rising: Hawaiian Movements of Life, Land, and Sovereignty
596:. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 6, 9, 32, 35, 144, 207.
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Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism
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270:"Episode 2: The meaning of aloha 'āina with Professor Jon Osorio"
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is made. Kalo requires copious water and is very sensitive to
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brings a perspective that pervades many aspects of life. Its
16:"love of the land", a central idea of Native Hawaiian thought
82:" of the 1970s, the term again came into common use, and a
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125:, a lauded Hawaiian singer, musician and speaker from
528:"Ordnance Cleanup Begins Healing of Hawaiian Island"
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258:Kamehameha Schools "E Ola" Curricular Framework
618:"Ma ka hana ka ʻike. History of Hālau Kū Māna"
66:understanding which "drives one into action" (
171:taro variety and the proposed arrival of 240
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211:. University of Hawaii Press. p. 166.
375:. University of Hawaii Press. p. 49.
240:"About the Project | Aloha ʻĀina Project"
19:For the political party in Hawaiʻi, see
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302:. Duke University Press. p. 161.
635:. Duke University Press. p. 139.
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493:Coleman, Stuart Holmes (3 May 2004).
205:Clark, John R. K. (1 February 2005).
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437:Rubinstein, Donald H. (July 1992).
296:Silva, Noenoe K. (17 August 2004).
592:Goodyear-Kaʻōpua, Noelani (2014).
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336:. Everything Books. p. 377.
534:. Associated Press. 2001-02-02.
403:Lutz, Catherine (1 March 2009).
330:Ryan, Donald P. (12 July 2004).
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677:Hawaiian sovereignty movement
499:. Random House. p. 222.
369:Blackford, Mansel G. (2007).
21:Aloha ʻĀina Party of Hawai`i
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682:Hawaiian words and phrases
409:. NYU Press. p. 312.
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274:www.hawaiipublicradio.org
107:Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana
63:Home Rule Party of Hawaii
179:Aloha ʻĀina in Education
560:Hoomanawanui, Kuualoha
169:genetically modified
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80:Hawaiian Renaissance
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450:978-1-878453-14-3
416:978-0-8147-5243-2
382:978-0-8248-3073-1
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78:During the "
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123:George Helm
68:George Helm
31:Aloha ʻāina
27:Aloha ʻĀina
666:Categories
570:: 207–208.
545:2015-10-07
279:2019-11-12
245:2019-11-12
192:References
158:pollutants
103:Kahoʻolawe
43:Jon Osorio
35:ecological
540:0458-3035
115:U.S. Navy
653:Archived
512:29 April
478:29 April
456:29 April
422:29 April
388:29 April
349:29 April
315:29 April
224:29 April
160:(hence,
98:claims.
55:Kumulipo
472:"Story"
173:Stryker
127:Molokai
49:History
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564:Hulili
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92:peace
598:ISBN
536:ISSN
514:2012
501:ISBN
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424:2012
411:ISBN
390:2012
377:ISBN
351:2012
338:ISBN
317:2012
304:ISBN
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148:taro
135:Maui
121:and
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