Application of Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Practices of Indigenous Hawaiians to Re-vegetation of Kaho'olawe
2008; University of Hawaii Press; Volume: 1; Linguagem: Inglês
10.17348/era.1.0.5-20
ISSN1547-3465
Autores Tópico(s)Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
ResumoKaho‘olawe Island has been established as a natural and cultural reserve, and an ongoing process of removal of dangerous unexploded ordnance is to be followed by a restoration of the native vegetation of the island, now largely denuded and highly disturbed by alien weeds. As part of the planning process for this effort, a review of Ha-waiian traditional ecological knowledge and land manage-ment practices was undertaken, offering many premises, precedents, and practica for the effort, all stemming from chants and recorded practices of Hawaiians. It becomes clear that traditional approaches have much to offer the modern restoration effort.He wahi kapu ‘o Kaho‘olawe no nā kaiāulu maoli a me ka hana no‘eau o ka po‘e Hawai‘i maoli. Ke lawe aku nei nā mea weliweli kaua mai Kaho‘olawe i kahi ‘ē, ma hope, e ho‘ōla hou ‘ana ka moku, ma o ke kanu ana o nā meaulu maoli ma nā wahi māneoneo o ka ‘āina i laila. I ho‘omākaukau no keia hana ho‘ōla, ua ho‘oma‘ama‘a mākou i nā oli, nā mo‘olelo, a me nā leo kūpuna e pili ana i ka hana kuhikuhi pu‘uone a me ko ka po‘e kahiko mālama ‘āina. Ua ‘ike nō mākou: he mea nui ka hana no‘eau a me ka ‘ike o ka po‘e Hawai‘i no ka ho‘ōla hou o Kaho‘olawe i keia mau lā. Ho‘okaka‘a lani i loli ka honua Kau mai ka ‘ahu‘ula ke ēwe ka piko o ke akua I luna i Hālulu ka lani I ka hale mahina poepoe I ka puka hāiki pilikia Puka kīkēkē a ke akua Ka wai hiona a Kanaloa A ke aka i malu o hu‘ahu‘akai ‘O Lono-i-ka-owali‘i ‘O Kū-‘i-‘io-moa ‘ O wau nō ia ‘ O Pōuliuli, ‘ O Pōwehiwehi ‘ O ka pōpolo kū mai a Kāne la e Hō mai ka ‘ ike i ‘ ike nui ‘ Āmama, ua noaThis pule, which comes to us from Theodore Kelsey, ac-companies rituals when asking for visions of the future. It is prayed that such visions continue to come to those ded-icated to the restoration of Kaho’olawe (Figure 1). This pule is presented here that efforts to reconcile the recov-ery of Hawaiian natural resources with the richness of Ha-waiian cultural knowledge continue to grow.
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