Monday, June 15, 2009

Kamehameha Day

His Majesty Kamehameha I Welcomes you to his

HAWAII No one knows his birthday.

No one knows where his bones lie. They were hidden away by a trusted retainer in the ancient way. He was born on the Big Island, Hawaii. When he was a young chief the god Lono sailed into Kealakekua Bay (The Way of the Gods) as prophesied. But when Lono returned after the proper season needing repairs to his floating island, the Hawaiians began to suspect that he was a mere man. A fight ensued and the "god" was felled. It was the death of a great explorer, James Cook. Kamehameha came of age in a unique moment in the history of the Hawaiian people. All of his wisdom, statecraft, and military cunning would be required to maintain his blood and his ways. Appropriate human sacrifice would also be offered, as at his great Heiau (temple) that stands to this day in Kohala.

But first he had to grow up; he was one among many chiefs. Hawaii had never been unified, or had one monarch.

Legend speaks of the heavy Naha Stone in the district of his birth. It was said that anyone who could lift the stone (Arthur Style) would be a great chief. Kamehameha the youth lifted it, they say. You can see the stone today by the side of the road to Hawi.

He had the vision to unite the Big Island.

When his opponent's army marched towards battle, Pele the volcano goddess lashed out, burying the warriors and their chief in hot lava. Their footprints can also still be seen today...Here was a warrior who had god on his side inDEED!

He conquered his home island, then Maui, and finally, Oahu which became his capitol. Kauai the unconquered joined by treaty.

He took Hawaii from pre-contact days into the modern political world, establishing an independent kingdom when other native nations were being colonized all over the world.

We celebrate his special day every June, covering his statue before the Hawaii Supreme Court Building with giant lei. Saturday saw his floral parade wend from the statue down to Waikiki.

Here's some of what I saw. . .

Royal Society Ladies Keep Tradition Alive.

Mahalo (thank you) Ladies!





Youth Challenge. Troubled local kids become

AWESOME through fellowship & self discipline



Don't they look great?



Hawaiian Blood.

Precious





Royal Princesses, represent each island, wearing each island's flower.

They reenact royal visits made to each island. It was on just such a visit that Queen Lili`uokalani wrote the haunting Aloha `Oe after seeing the sweet parting of one of her court ladies and a Paniola (Hawaiian Cowboy) like this handsome specimen. Oahu = Ilima







Go on!

Click on the photos to enlarge

!





Those long dresses are actually loose fabric fastened cunningly with Kukui Nuts as "buttons." in an old style.

Horsey looks elegant in that big lei!













“Tradition does not mean that the living are dead, it means that the dead are living.”
Harold Macmillan





Hawaiian Homesteads were established by Congress in the early 20th Century.

These folks hold jobs, and live in society like all other citizens, many are US veterans, but they dwell on Hawaiian land. This simple fact keeps pride and ancient cultural treasures alive to the benefit of us all.
Bringing up the rear (of the horses!)

with shovels.

YAY!





Thanks for joining us today.
A l o h a! Cloudia






22 comments:

  1. Traditions - I salute.

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  2. I didn't get to go to the parade so I loved seeing your fabulous photos. Very impressive. I also loved reading the legend of King Kamehameha. Wonderful!

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  3. Looks like a fun parade and the second I've seen in this MTM day. Very colorful I might add.

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  4. All your photos are great Cloudia, and I always enjoy learning more of the history of Hawaii's great King Kamehameha. Fantastic post!

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  5. The last picture brought a smile. I have seen the pooper scoopers in action all over the place. Neat post about Kamehameha Day.

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  6. Fabulous! .. dont you think those lovely women in black were hot? One was wearing a leather coat, I was surprised ...

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  7. This post is great, Cloudia. I learned so much about Hawaii. Loved the quote on tradition.

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  8. these are wonderful traditions and the photos are great. Thanks, Cloudia.

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  9. Even the poop wagon is finely decorated. Gotta love that.

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  10. Wonderful traditions and stories you tell us Cloudia. As always the photos are superb. x

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  11. Excellent post, Cloudia!

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  12. I hung on every photo, every word! That statue of the King is the quintessential Hawaii image to me, more than Diamond Head and all the others. He looks wonderful royally draped in flowers...

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  13. Thank you, Cloudia, for the wonderful pictures. And I loved that they were clickable.

    Yes, he was a grand king. Sometimes we forget that other countries had founding fathers and mothers, too. Thanks for showing this to us.

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  14. Aloha, Cloudia, sorry for my absence my friend. I never forget though my friend who lives one of my dream lives on a boat in Hawaii.

    I remember well being in a parade with horses. My husband pulled the bucket and shovel and was mightily embarrassed but he loves me so did it anyway.

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  15. I loved this post, Cloudia. What a great commemoration for those of us who couldn't be in Hawaii for KKI Day! Mahalo, Olivia from happyluau

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  16. I love parades, and thank you for including this.

    His Majesty is tall! But very colorful.

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  17. Love the pictures and really enjoyed the history lesson. Aloha Cloudia.

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  18. Parades are always a lot of fun and thanks for posting your photos, Cloudia, to share with us.

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  19. Wow - what a beautiful parade and beautiful people... and the HUGE leis for the horses! Hawaiians have a wonderful, quite sense of class for simple things....even the scooper wagon has a pleasant garland around the edge...Mahalo for showing the parade. DrumMajor

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  20. Man, he is a tall MoFo thought ain't he? Reminds me of King Rootin' Tootin' from The 3 Stooges. Where in the hell did I come up with that?

    Wil Harrison.com

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  21. Y'all ROCK for swinging by today.
    I loves me some parade - glad you do too ;-)
    Aloha

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