Friday, October 2, 2009

Talofa Tonga

Talofa Means Aloha
in Samoa & Tonga-



TODAY,
Our hearts are with those isles
as many of our Honolulu neighbors wait to hear about family "back home."






The first military relief flights that reached Pago Pago today took off from right here at Honolulu's Hickam Air Force Base. A Significant portion of the crew are Americans of Samoan ethnicity on a double mission: to do their military duty, and to search for family.



In the 1990 census of the United States, over 55,000 Americans reported themselves to be of Samoan descent. Approximately 26,000 of the respondents resided in California, with another 15,000 in Hawaii, and 2,000 in Utah. But the influence of Samoan Americans has spread far beyond these limited regions.



The contributions made by Samoan Americans have been many and diverse; From courage and legendary valor in the US military during the Korean conflict and the Vietnam war (to today), to prowess on the athletic field that has brought much well earned recognition for Samoan Americans in college and professional football.



Samoan culture is sophisticated, exemplified by rhetorical skills, which are considerable. Samoan villages are complex in their structure, with different levels of matai, or chiefs.
(Yes, the drink was named for them)
Villagers are related in various complex ways
through common descent groups.



The involvement of small numbers of immigrant Samoan youth in gang activity has led some to dismiss all young Samoan Americans as hoodlums. But most Samoans and Tongans are people of deep faith, as the growing number of their churches attests. My own anxieties around illness and death have been lightened considerably by their attitude & example of deep gratitude and resignation in such matters. At the end, everyone gathers to join in wonderful (loud!) choral singing. Gospel music has a whole new voice!




Since most things & resources are shared by the entire family group, it is considered selfish to keep everything you earn for your own "nuclear" family. This can create psychological conflict for Islanders assimilating into western type cultures like the US and New Zealand.
They are very generous to their churches.





The Samoan islands were colonized between 500 and 800 B.C. by an oceanic people distinguished by their production of Lapita pottery—a unique pottery form named after one of the original sites of pottery shard discovery in Melanesia. Based on archaeological, botanical, and linguistic evidence, it seems almost certain that the ancestors of the Samoans originated in Indo-Malaysia, spent several centuries living along coastal areas of New Guinea, and then colonized Samoa and Tonga.


Over time the descendants of these original immigrants colonized other regions, including Tahiti and other areas of eastern Polynesia, the Marquesas, Hawaii, and New Zealand.



Western awareness of Samoa grew over time due to its proximity to southern whaling grounds and the unparalleled harbor of Pago Pago. In 1857 a German firm greatly expanded the copra trade, establishing a regional center in Samoa. This led to the establishment of a German consulate in 1861. This increased interest in Samoa created significant tensions between the colonial powers. Samoa was finally partitioned between the east (Eastern Samoa) and the west (German Samoa) during the 1880s.





American Samoa was eventually ceded by the chiefs of Tutuila and Manu'a to the United States and administered by the Department of the Navy as a U.S. territory. The region was largely forgotten until the 1960s, under President John F. Kennedy who had served in the South Pacific during WWII. During the 1960s and 1970s construction on American Samoa increased dramatically. Elections now determine the territorial governor, a position previously filled by appointment from Washington, D.C.
Tuna canning has been a major employer.





Western Samoa changed hands from German ownership to New Zealand administration during the First World War after a bloodless invasion.


Jacob Roggeveen, the first European to discover Samoa, happened upon the islands in 1722 during his ill-fated voyage from the Netherlands to New Ireland.



Today's Honolulu mayor is Mufi Hanneman, a Harvard educated song bird of Samoan ethnicity. (Get call waiting when you phone the City, and you will hear him singing!)
The mayor's brother, Gus, called a meeting of Samoan comunity leaders to Honolulu Hale (City Hall) yesterday in order to organize prayer and relief efforts. I was once at a smallish event where Da Mayor spoke with evident feeling about seeing the names of his chiefly family members on the historic treaties kept in Harvard's library collection.



Let's face it, growing up in America in the 50s, 60's & 70s one never saw an Asian, person of color, or even overtly ethnic person unless it was part of the plot or setting. The US was called a "melting pot" - which meant "Everyone try to pass as culturally English/American."




But living in Hawaii gives us the opportunity to interact with others with a certain Esprit Des Isles that gets us past stereotyping (well, except for island humour that teases us all, from the talkative Portugee, to the Filipino who can't be an HPD detective because he cannot wear plain clothes, to the "thrifty" Chinese, to the clueless Haole in the ugly Aloha shirt).




One of the heroes of my little novel, Aloha Where You Like Go? was Fia the taxi yard boss. That character is based on a man who was a very kind mentor to a certain clueless young haole wahine , and who taught ME da Honolulu taxi business many years ago when I needed the job. When a dignified Tongan boss tell your husband that you are "one hard worker" well, that remark (from HIM) meant as much to me as my college degree. Maybe I'm even prouder of it.




So Talofa Tonga, Samoa, and Indonesia today as you struggle with the instant emergency of earthquake and tsunami. I know that you are resilient folks with great heart - and hearts very dear to God.



And thanks to each of
YOU
who stopped by today.
Warm ALOHA/Talofa cloudia

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Ice or Nice?

A L O H A
Friend!

>
click on photos for dose of joy"Wisdom is what's left after we've run out of personal opinions"
Cullen Hightower


"Autumn is a second Spring, when each leaf's a flower."
Camus





"Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut

that held its ground."

Annonymous







"I think I'm of a different style than I thought I was."

Leonard Cohen




Have you noticed?

Our culture doesn't respect those

who make others feel comfortable.

Doing so is considered the job of servants & underlings.

But Jesus, Buddha, and your grandma

drew hearts close with the charisma of love.

"Who would be great, must be servant of all."

Would you rather be feared. . . or loved?

A L O H A,

Comfort Spiralista, Cloudia

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

All Technique - No Content!

A L O H A!



We Made it Through Another Tsunami Threat. . .



It's MORNING once again in Waikiki
click on photos to see what I mean"If you are losing your leisure, look out;
you may be losing your soul."
Logan Pearsall Smith




"Autumn, the year's last loveliest smile."
William Cullen Bryant



"Red can get SO lucky - that it turns PURPLE!"
Chinese Wisdom








Being "good with words"
means that the words
are the least & servant part
of something greater.



The story demanding to be told,
Truth that will not be silent,
Compulsion that separates
And unites. . .



This "something greater"
is what makes them good;
And sometimes-
even Great.



Aloha, Friends! Cloudia



Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Dodged the Bullet

A L O H A!
Aren't YOU glad that YOU aren't in Waikiki Today?
click on photos for the full experienceThe folks at the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center
are busily working the phones, computers & satellite feeds.
They are monitoring buoys scattered throughout the Pacific
looking for patterns and trends.
An 8.4 earthquake rumbled in Samoa today
creating waves that pushed some cars around, destroyed at least one village, and injured some people; though there
are no reports of fatalities.



Selfishly, the question for me is:
"Do I need to grab necessities
(including Kitty) and head for the hills?
We do after all live on a boat here in Waikiki.



Bless my gal pal Judy who called to warn me and re-activate our standing emergencies-invite to her lovely home WAY up
on the hillside.
(Thanks, Special!)



Imagine living in the days when a gentle, island day like this could suddenly,
without warning, erupt in a huge killer wave or hurricane!
Better to know, but still disruptive of my planned day.



"Why must there always be a problem!"
George Costanza / Larry David



Well, General Lee, of the Hawaii National Guard and the
Civil Defense honchos
inside their Diamond Head HQ, are letting their breath out as the experts at PTWC downgrade the threat to our Islands.
At 11:11 am Hawaiian Standard Time it appears that we will have some unusual tides, but no hugely dangerous tsunami, arriving sometime after 1pm.



Locals and visitors are advised not to swim in the ocean till 7:30 pm.
I will be standing by to ease up my lines, shift bumpers, & otherwise protect our floating
home.



Not the way I intended to spend my day but. . .
"Life is what happens, while you are busy making other plans."
John Lennon


And speaking of major impacts that can shatter all "normalcy"
yesterday, September 28th, was the 75th Birthday of "BB"
Brigitte Bardot


<>< . ><>
"In all her films, she likes animals."
De Beauvoir
<><



"Well my telephone rang it would not stop.
It's President Kennedy callin` me up.
He said 'My friend Bob, what do we need
to make the country grow?'
I said, 'My friend, Brigitte Bardot. . . .' "
Dylan
><>
Thanks SO much for looking in.
Let's meet here tomorrow for more
mundane sights,
Quirky Quotes,
and "Tall Tale" speculations!
Warm Aloha, Cloudia

Monday, September 28, 2009

Do the "Nothing!"

Aloha Greetings!
Wanna put your feet in da sand,
and do nothing with me for a while?
click on photos lazilyThe only thing wrong with growing and healing
is that it can look like
"nothing."


No tantrum, no impatience, no saddness,
no bottomless pain;
Especially to the drama-addicted and over stimulated.



Yup, being balanced & happy can look like
a whole lotta "nothing"
to some.




I guess it's kind like
the sound of one hand clapping!






Applause to
YOU
for joining us today.
Now go do
"Nothing!"
L O L
A L O H A HA HA :)
cloudia

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Aloha Floral Parade

A L O H A
Welcome to Waikiki
click on photos to "love a parade." This lady is a Pa`u (Pah-ooo) rider.
The Pa`u is the garment she is wearing.
It covers her party clothes for the ride.
The horses, too, are garlanded
with lei. (lei is plural - not "leiS")
"Distaining the "side-saddle" position, Hawaiian women preferred long, full riding skirts (pa'u) which enabled them to straddle their horses. They would often spur their mounts to full gallop to make a dramatic arrival at a party."
"

Hula Baby in a Bathtub?

"You know, I think that if parents would spend less time worrying about what their kids watch on TV and more time worrying about what's going on in their kids' lives, this world would be a much better place."
Trey Parker and Matt Stone


Gracious hand gestures of Aloha

"The thing always happens that you really believe in

and the belief in a thing makes it happen."


Frank Lloyd Wright





"Howzit, Brah!"
("How is it, my Brother?")
"A true man never frets about his place in the world, but just slides into it by the gravitation of his nature, and swings there as easily as a star."
Edward Chapin








Kam Schools in da HOUSE!
"He who confers a favor should at once forget it, if he is not to show a sordid ungenerous spirit. To remind a man of a kindness conferred and to talk of it, is little different from reproach."
Demosthenes





A reflective moment: parade rest.
"This time, like all times, is a very good one,
if we but know what to do with it."
Ralph Waldo Emerson






A Hawaiian cowboy is called a "Paniola"
for the Spanish vanqueros who came to teach the
Hawaiians how to work the cattle that Captain Vancouver had
gifted to King Kamehameha. The Mexican/Spanish also brought the guitar, and (some say) the marijuana. Our cowboys won plenty of
rodeos on the mainland back in the golden age of rodeo too.
Don't let the flowers fool you, these guys are the real item!
"Anonymity is the truest expression of altruism."
Eric Gibson




Well dressed horse!











The Royal Court.


"I believe our longing for an innate harmony runs deeper
than our longing for righteousness."
Evelyn Rodriguez






You no need by young, or thin to be beautiful in Hawaii.











"Hey! How did SHE get to do THAT?!"




Thank you for stopping by, Friends!
Enjoy your day-




A L O H A! Cloudia











Saturday, September 26, 2009

Battleship

A L O H A!
Happy Saturday, Come in and Relax-


click on photos - then saluteUSS Missouri Being Towed Past Diamond Head

“Ships at a distance have every man's wish on board”
Zora Neale Hurston

Her Great 16 inch Guns
(They fire shells the size of volkswagens 20+ miles)


"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed."
Dwight David Eisenhower




Surrender Deck, Tokyo Bay
"Lord, bid war's trumpet cease;
Fold the whole earth in peace."
Oliver Wendell Holmes



"When eating bamboo sprouts,
remember the man who planted them."
Chinese Proverb



Where did Summer Go?
Suddenly the floats are gliding down Kalakaua Avenue for today's Aloha Week Floral Parade.


The season just past was EPIC for South Shore surfers, and forecasters are calling for perfect big waves (and soon!) for Oahu's legendary North Shore.
Looks to be 6 to 10 feet today!
Just now, Waikiki is a glistening jewel set in azure waters, perfect for revving your engines - or just relaxing in style. China's Shaolin Monks are here, showing off their amazing moves at the Blaisdell Arena, and Aerosmith will perform here this Fall too. So many choices! Why just the other day a friend asked me if I was going to the Cazimero Brothers' Christmas Show at the Hawaii Theater again this year. Of course! But there's so much to enjoy around here before December. Heck, we even have opera!
One thing you WON'T be able to do for a while is to visit the Battleship Missouri; The "Mighty Mo" will be freed from her moorings on October 14th for the first time since arriving in Hawaii 11 years ago. Beginning before sun-up on that day, all 887 feet, and 54,899 tons of the grey lady will be nudged by three or four tugboats the two miles from Pearl Harbor's Pier Foxtrot 5 to the famous shipyard's Dry-dock 4. Dignitaries are invited along for the 12 to 14 hour ride. But hundreds more of us average folks are expected to be watching from the sidelines. Some lucky people residing up on the hillsides will be able to see the drama unfolding from their homes. Engineers are custom building 310 wooden "keel blocks" (8,000 pounds EACH) on which the giant will rest. Once inside the dry-dock it should take 3 hours for the water to be drained out while divers ensure the correct placement of bulk on block. (The dignitaries will be stuck with each other's company until the ship is high and dry ;) One of Hawaii's top 10 visitor attractions, the Mighty Mo drew 48,111 guests and pilgrims in July. That's 12 percent of all visitors to this island, including numerous WWII veterans from EVERY side of the war.
And yes, those are the big 16 inch guns that Cher cavorted on for her
"If I could Turn Back Time video!"
Sadly, the Association that manages the ship is forbidden from firing them (or the ships engines) inside Pearl Harbor. Watching the grey ghost glide past Waikiki from the deck of my own boat on Fathers' Day of 1998 was a surreal experience! Once tours resume on January 29th you can also hold your function or soiree aboard the ship's fan tail. What a place for a birthday party! (I'm just saying. . . .) You will again be able to walk the "Surrender Deck" where the Japanese Empire and the United States signed the instrument that ended WWII. While you are there, just look over one ship's length to the Arizona Memorial, and you will be looking at the spot where war began, from the very spot where it ended. Only in Hawaii!
I'll take plenty of parade pictures to share with you.
Have a great day-
A L O H A Cloudia