Friday, April 1, 2011

Never Too Late

ALOHA!

So Glad YOU Came Today


Honolulu at Peace


"Gratitude is the memory of the heart."

  Jean Baptiste Massieu, 
translated from French


Honolulu in Wartime, WWII

This evening
 in site of the iconic Aloha Tower,
  on the deck of French naval ship
 PS Prairial during  port call here,
  A local man, retired attorney
Genro Kashiwa, 87,
 will be awarded France's highest civilian honor:
 the Legion of Honor
 and rank of chevalier (knight). 

He will be
 the second member
 of the famed 442nd Regimental Combat Team
 to be so honored by a grateful French nation.  


Nisei World War II veteran
 Genro Kashiwa






"Why me?"
 He asked a reporter.
"There were lot of other people
 doing more heroic things."




Courtesy Midweek.com 

Kashiwa said
 he'll accept the award
 for "his old gang."





While serving with the "Go For Broke"
442nd Regimental Combat Team
in France and Italy, 
Kashiwa earned two Silver Stars,
 a Bronze Star
 and a Purple Heart.

 The Army unit was made up mainly of
 Japanese-Americans
 who volunteered to prove their loyalty.

 Kashiwa's own father
Ryuten Kashiwa, a minister at Oahu's
 Waialua Hongwanji
was sent to an internment camp
 in Crystal City, Texas, as an enemy alien.



Mr. Kashiwa told a reporter,
that he remembers the details of battles
 that happened so long ago,
 and that
 "receiving the Chevalier Legion of Honor
 is almost a surreal experience - 
that events of over 65 years ago
 are being remembered today
 by the French government."




In his personal history of the French campaign,
 Kashiwa said following the famous "Banzai Charge" 
by fellow soldiers of the 442nd, 
his company ran into a German machine gun nest 
on the ridge line of a mountain in November 1944.

Kashiwa assumed command of his platoon 
when its sergeant was wounded 
and had to be evacuated.
According to his Silver Star citation,
Kashiwa took his platoon through a minefield,
 surprised the Germans and killed three enemy soldiers, silencing the machine gun.


Two of his soldiers were wounded in the firefight. Kashiwa is credited with treating their wounds under fire and directing their evacuations.


He received his Silver Star Oak Leaf Cluster, signifying a second award of the nation's highest medal for valor, during the Italian campaign in Mount Fologorito.

In Italy in April 1945,
 Kashiwa was in charge of a platoon
 assigned to clear the summit of a mountain
 to prevent a German counterattack.

After a personal reconnaissance, 
he directed one squad to attempt to move around
 the base of the summit
 and take the enemy from the rear
 while he led the other squad
 in a frontal assault.

His squad was able to almost reach the top
 before it was detected.

 Catching the enemy soldiers
10 yards away from their machine guns,
 Kashiwa rushed forward and cut off the Germans
 from their weapons. 

Kashiwa's tommy gun jammed 
after firing one shot,
 but the German soldiers, 
apparently confused, fled.


Kashiwa grabbed a German machine gun
 and fired it on the fleeing soldiers,
 forcing them to seek shelter in a reinforced bunker.

  Then he crawled alone to within grenade range
 and threw two grenades
which forced the remaining six Germans
 to surrender, the Silver Star citation said.

After the war,
 Kashiwa attended University of Michigan law school
 and practiced law in Honolulu
from 1951 to 2005.



 Cpl. Jonathan Faircloth was 22 years old. 


"Gratitude is the least of the virtues,
 but ingratitude is the worst of vices."

Thomas Fuller



 This young man,
a U.S. Marine
 was killed Tuesday night 
when his CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter
 performed an emergency landing
 and crashed
 in the middle of Kaneohe Bay here on Oahu.

He hailed from Mechanicsburg,Pennsylvania
but all Hawaii military
are our people.

  His three fellow Marines
 remain hospitalized in stable condition
 at the Queen’s Medical Center in Honolulu.




Cpl. Faircloth was married last January to the sister of a fellow marine.

 He and his wife Alicia lived in Kailua and enjoyed spending time outdoors
 hiking and at the beach.

Jon's father recalled his last trip from Pennsylvania to Hawaii in October.
"We were very blessed in that the last time we were with Jon 
we had three weeks uninterrupted with him,"
 said Dean Faircloth.

He says the last time he spoke with his son by phone
 was the day the helicopter went down.
"His last words were ‘I love you, dad,'" 
said an emotional Faircloth.
  "It was nice. 
He was only 22, but he didn't waste his life. 
He built something with it.
 We're proud of him.
  We are immensely proud."


"On a windswept hill
by a billowing sea,
my destiny sits
and waits for me."
Robert Brault

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Puamana

A L O H A!



"People are like stained-glass windows.
  They sparkle and shine when the sun is out,
 but when the darkness sets in 
their true beauty is revealed
 only if there is light from within."

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross








"The universe is like a safe to which there is a combination.
  But the combination is locked up 
in the safe."

Peter De Vries






"A great part of life consists in contemplating 
what we cannot cure."

Robert Louis Stevenson

And now?   PUAMANA:

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Comfort Clothes

Aloha & Welcome Back!



What do YOU wear when you want to feel like
 "yourself?"
  What Clothes make you comfortable?
If your friends are colorful,
 do you dress colorfully like the lady above?






Maybe you wear something that says:
 "DANGER, I'm explosive!"










Perhaps a uniform 
or piece of equipment 
shows your identity:
"I do real serious, physical work:
 building & repairing stuff. 
 I'm Patriotism & Union all the way!"






Hula Dancers wear foliage
 (for Hula Kahiko: ancient hula)
or colorful mu`u mu`u
 for Monarchy Era (and later) Hula `Auana.
What a bunch of dolls!
(there are a dizzying array of hula styles
under these broad headings.
see some  here.)




Some of us go through life wearing a shell.
Others can't see it,
but they feel it.


For me, 
my 'Chinatown Lion Dancing' T-shirt,
(one in black, one lucky red)
is my "go to."
Yee's Hung Ga Lion Dance Team
Not my shirt. For illustration only.
For purchase go here.




The "base" is 
my Dickies carpenter shorts
with tons of pockets
for camera & notebook,
bandanna,
and neccessaries. . . 

(can't see the cargo pockets in this shot)

Of course, we all wear slippers
(what you probably call 'flip-flops')


And most importantly:


Hawaii Lifeguard Hat!






Now I'm ready
to go shoot some
pictures!


Hawaii wears rainbows;
We are under-dressed
without our smile!






 ><}}(°>


SO,
What do YOU wear
to feel
"comfortable,
safe,
and like
 Your Self?"


          Leave us a comment, Ducky!  cloudia

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Trump Panders



Repeating a lie
does not make it
truth.

Perhaps Trump doesn't remember his closest college friends,
or the milestones in their lives,
but Governor Neil Abercrombie
 of Hawaii
attended the University of Hawaii with
Barack Obama Senior, and Stanley Ann Dunham,
the President's
parents.

He remembers the birth of Barack Jr.
as do many, many people
 still living here.

The President was NOT born in Kenya.

Repeating that lie,
or acting like it's
an open question at this point,
does not turn it into 
Truth.



Barack H. Obama was born August 4, 1961,
 at Kapi'olani Maternity & Gynecological Hospital
 in Honolulu, Hawaii. His mother,
 Stanley Ann Dunham, was born in Wichita, Kansas,
 of mostly English, but also some German, 
descent.

Young Barack and Family (Mother, Grandfather, sister)
Here in Honolulu
His father, Barack Obama, Sr., was from
  Nyanza Province, Kenya. 

Obama is the first President to have been
 born in Hawaii.

Obama's parents met in 1960 in a Russian language class
 at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa, where his father
 was a foreign student on scholarship.

The couple married on February 2, 1961, 
but separated when Obama Sr. went to
 Harvard University on scholarship.
They divorced in 1964.
Obama Sr. remarried
 and returned to Kenya.




"REPORTER “LIED”

 ABOUT OBAMA NOT HAVING A BIRTH CERTIFICATE"



(MediaQUICKY) Hawaii’s Governor
 was pissed this week at an old friend
 after the reporter said the governor
 told him “the state could not find
 Obama’s birth certificate”. Mike Evans
 (unknown journalist to many) is now
 changing his story and says he hasn’t talked to
 Hawaii’s Gov. Neil Abercrombie
 since he took office
 plus the Governor NEVER said he couldn’t find the President’s birth certificate.
 Evans says he “misspoke”
 and has since then apologized. 

SOURCE: KQRS

Monday, March 28, 2011

For Sharing

'Aloha' is not merely a word.
It is a concept, a philosophy of life, a powerfully simple
faith in Love.



Sometimes, I just need to stare.
And to recover. Pleasantly numb.
(Sounds too much like a drug reverie :-)


How about you? Do you give yourself
 this permission and time?


Hawaii is good for staring
 and soul healing -
 so much beauty.
'Polynesian Paralysis' we call it.
Along with the power of Aloha,
It's why folks visit here.




Watching people in their natural surroundings -
 on the sand, by the sea, with their families,
or traveling alone for business, wisdom, or war. . . 

It is healing to hear the tongues of the world,
all relaxing, all unwinding together in welcome,
 all feeling lucky they 'came Hawaii.'



"It's a pleasant thing to be young,
 and have ten toes." Robert Louis Stevenson








Watching people, clouds, animals, flowers. . . 
hearing the breeze, the surf,
 Hawaiian guitars-

replenishes the flame in my soul.

I hope you feel that way
when you come here
 to share what we care about, 
and play in the sand
of your mind's eye. . .
enjoying the warm sun of our mutual
Aloha. . . 

thank Y O U

         for sharing it.  cloudia