Saturday, January 17, 2009

Kalihi



"Where we love is home, Home that our feet may leave, but not our hearts." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.


"Home is a place you grow up wanting to leave, and
grow old wanting to get back to." John Ed Pearce
m
"Nostalgia is like a grammar lesson: you find the present tense, but the past perfect!" Owens Lee Pomeroy













When I moved to Oahu from the Big Island, the neighborhood of Kalihi was Honolulu to me. To most visitors, heck – even to many locals- Kalihi is synonymous with industrial Nimitz Highway between the airport and Downtown. Most folks drive past the small factories, commercial businesses, docks, oil transport, and all the other necessities that most of us ignore without realizing that there is a gritty, but historic and homey neighborhood just blocks off the highway. Kalihi is working class and affordable, and (most importantly) it is a genuine neighborhood, perhaps Honolulu’s (or even Hawaii’s!) signature neighborhood – its lots more than a dusty highway! Kalihi Kai is the area makai (ocean-ward) of Nimitz Highway: little streets full of tiny, urban residences, the like of which are rarely seen this side of Hawaii 50 reruns on TV. At the shore one can look out at tiny Mokuea Island, which once was a flourishing Hawaiian fishing village, and is still visited by locals to fish or just get away from the city for a while. Between Nimitz and School Street (towards the mountains) is called Kalihi Waena, served by King Street and Dillingham Boulevard. Tiny, indispensable industries line Kalani and Colburn Streets. This is a tough urban enclave where successive waves of immigrants work hard, move up, and move on – possibly to lovely Kalihi Valley (Kalihi Uka) way up in the hills, where the Like Like Highway travels over the Ko`olau mountains like the Pali Highway’s poorer sister, ending in working class country-town Kaneohe, rather than the Pali’s rapidly gentrifying Kailua destination with it’s art galleries and beachfront homes. Being from Kalihi, saying that you graduated from Farrington High School, MEANS something in this town. It means that you are a down-to-earth person who has worked hard for all you ever got, and who never forgets where you came from. Yes, when I was fresh off the jet from Kona, Kalihi WAS my Honolulu, the bars, the jobs, the affordable housing, the amazing mix of people and cultures, the friends-for-life. That’s my Kalihi – food stands, happy-sticky children, the music, the great grassroots organizations like KOKUA Kalihi Valley, and the smell of diesel from Dillingham Blvd mixing with the Korean Kalbi Beef. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world. If you go, especially check out Bob’s Barbecue at Dillingham & Waiakamilo, Mitsu Ken on School Street (go early in the day for garlic chicken!), or Papa Al’s favorite “classic hole-in-the-wall”, Ethel’s on Kalihi St. You GO Kalihi! You’ll always be special to me! . . .

15 comments:

  1. Good evening Cloudia,

    First, thank you for your comments, yesterday.

    I concur, and I am just as surprised.

    But now, you. YOU as you might do.

    You do such a great job bringing me to your Hawaii, that I am really going to have to visit one of the years, and sooner rather than later. With a book in one hand and a thick pile of printouts in the other. Traipsing in footsteps that have been lived, loved, and revealed by skillful writer.

    Then, invariably, I will become sidetracked. But I will definitely treat you and the Chief Mechanic (or Captain? I have no idea which of you is which...) to a veggie plus treat at the Pink Lady or really anywhere you suggest. So that I can regale you with where I was sidetracked, what I found, and to hear your comments on the cultural history of whatever I happened upon.

    You are evoking a Hawaii which I had no idea existed.

    ...Not that I don't want to also check out the surf and see just how many coral cuts I can take before I cry "enough", or before I cry...

    Thank you, very much.

    Tschuess,
    Chris

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  2. what a super thing to say, thank you cloudia :D

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  3. Your posts kinda make me want to live there too.

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  4. Hawaii 5 0. That brings back some memories. Man I used to like that show. Book 'em, Dano.

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  5. Very cool to read all about that. I think many cities have "life-blood" neighborhoods like this one - they keep it real.

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  6. You can certainly tell that Kalihi is home to you. Your love of that town shows through in your writing.

    Sorry I haven't been around much, so much catching up to do, I almost got lost in the web. Granted a web I created for myself but what can I say. I'll be better about visiting.

    Aloha

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  7. Cloudia, I feel like I'm with you in the Kalihi neighborhood. Cool!

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  8. Cloudia, whenever I visit your blog I know I have come to the real Hawaii, where I can live and breathe while I read savouring your words that speak volumes!

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  9. Ake: you're right, Dear!

    Chris; You Da Bes` !

    LaughingWolf: And well deserved my friend.

    Dave King: Glad you spend part of your day here at da beach.

    Charles: We LOVE the show. The chases are comically out of sequence (They just passed the hospital and now they're at the airport!") and we love to see the town as it was, places forgotten, familiar ones as they once were. The Ilikai, where McGarret spins around and faces the camera, may be closed as a hotel! What was the question? ;-)

    Deborah; Perceptive and well stated.

    Candle-person- thanks!

    Eric S: We're all so busy. I appreciate the time you lovely people spend here, and I too feel guilty about not visiting everybody everyday. Let's just appreciate each other and enjoy this crazy blogosphere!!


    Hey Gran: Lets get some plate-lunch. i know a place ;-)


    Barbara M: Coming from you, that lifts me up. Thanks for those lovely words.

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  10. I love learning about Hawaii through your eyes.

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  11. Thanks for sharing a side of Hawaii I wouldn't normally know about.

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  12. Thanks Mary and Barrie for your comments ;->

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  13. Wow, your knowledge is food for my thoughts! Thank you!

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