Ron Cawthon Good news is under Hawaiian Kingdom law, no foreigner can hold a Fee-Simple interest in land, unless they obtain a Patent of Denizen, by the government of the Hawaiian Kingdom, which requires they agree to comply with HK law and its constitution...so any of the Americans claiming they hold a fee-simple interest in land in Hawaii, don't!
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- 🌿😍No More Leg Swelling with 100% Herbal Ginger Oil
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- 18,913,057 Views
- 🌿😍No More Leg Swelling with 100% Herbal Ginger Oil
🚨Clinically Proven
Get Yours Here 👉https://goo.gl/X5yRKt...
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See More
-4:47Click for more
28,898 Views
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Ken Burch shared a post to the group: Hawaiʻi Aloha ʻĀina Independence Forum 2018.
<>"A revolution for Maori is in the hands of our youth."🌏Maori youth fighting for independence in Aotearoa<>947,982 Views- 🌱🍃Excellent Data Base with Videos of 35 Plants and How to Use and Prepare🌿 <>Laʻau lapaʻau is a traditional medical practice, as defined by the World Health Org...anization: “Traditional Medicine is the sum total of the knowledge, skills, and practices based on the theories, beliefs, and experiences indigenous to different cultures, whether explicable or not, used in the maintenance of health as well as in the prevention, diagnosis, improvement or treatment of physical and mental illness.”
The knowledge of laʻau lapaʻau is shared by past generations that can be traced back over 1,000 years. A Kahuna Lapaʻau is master and expert in the field of laʻau lapaʻau. If parent sensed a child had a “healing spirit,” they sent them to live and study with a kahuna from as young as five years of age. They would spend many decades studying to become a Kahuna Lapaʻau. The Kahuna responsible for gathering, preparing and administering the herbs according to the needs of the patient and healing properties of the laʻau. The different laʻau used by a Kahuna can consist of plants, animals and minerals from the land and ocean.See More
Many of the la‘au used for healing contain exceptional healing properties and have become accepted in Western medicine. For example many well- known laʻau include aloe vera, awa, awapuhi, kalo, ko, mai’a, noni, and olena. Aloe vera is used for burns, high blood pressure, diabetes, and cancer. Awa, more commonly known as Kava, can be used for treating anxiety and insomnia. The awapuhi root is used to treat ringworm, sprains, bruises, headache, toothache, and stomach ache. Kalo, one of the most significant plants in Hawaiian culture, can be used on wounds to stop bleeding and prevent swelling from bites and stings.
In 1988 the Native Hawaiian Health Care Act recognized the use of traditional healers as a way to improve the health of the Hawaiian people.<> - Pā uhi, for my 44th birthday, I had the pleasure and spiritual journey to reconnect with my ancestors with Keli’i Makua. The reconnection and rejuvenation of th...is experience has led me to reflect upon my ancestors. They were highly skilled and advanced in specific tasks relating to anatomy. Before the western world started to tattoo, Polynesians were engaged in ink as a way to show rank, sorrow or passion for a loved one, a rite of passage etc...I experienced the sound of the tattoo instrument called the mōlī to be comforting, the birds, butterflies, dragonflies and cool breeze passed through like they were witnessing this special moment, the plants that were used for the instruments or for protocol like kō, niu, kōki’o, la’i, kukui, mai’a surrounded the screen tātau home with a peaceful, serene atmosphere and the music of Polynesian voices left a intoxicating effect. #PāUhi#Ka Pā ʻO Hūnōhūnōholani
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