how awesome is he?....also, want my daughter acting again...….
fyi ---another project with alodio owners existing....private properties, not belonging to the U.S., or State
-6:01
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125,215 Views
Office of Hawaiian Affairs
This week, the OHA Board of Trustees will be heading to the island of Molokaʻi on August 7th and 8th for a Community Meeting and Board Meeting in Hoʻolehua.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
Coming from a family of storytellers, Mikiʻala uses her history and knowledge of Molokaʻi everyday as the Interpretive Park Ranger and Storyteller of Kalaupapa. Through moʻolelo, she inspires others to remember our history and rediscover the abilities and talents of our kūpuna.
Mikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
See MoreMikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
-6:01
Click for more
125,215 Views
Office of Hawaiian Affairs
This week, the OHA Board of Trustees will be heading to the island of Molokaʻi on August 7th and 8th for a Community Meeting and Board Meeting in Hoʻolehua.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
Coming from a family of storytellers, Mikiʻala uses her history and knowledge of Molokaʻi everyday as the Interpretive Park Ranger and Storyteller of Kalaupapa. Through moʻolelo, she inspires others to remember our history and rediscover the abilities and talents of our kūpuna.
Mikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
See MoreMikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
disinformation perpetuated by occupiers, etc. ….corrections continue....
-6:02
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125,215 Views
Office of Hawaiian Affairs
This week, the OHA Board of Trustees will be heading to the island of Molokaʻi on August 7th and 8th for a Community Meeting and Board Meeting in Hoʻolehua.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
Coming from a family of storytellers, Mikiʻala uses her history and knowledge of Molokaʻi everyday as the Interpretive Park Ranger and Storyteller of Kalaupapa. Through moʻolelo, she inspires others to remember our history and rediscover the abilities and talents of our kūpuna.
Mikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
See MoreMikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
-6:02
Click for more
125,215 Views
Office of Hawaiian Affairs
This week, the OHA Board of Trustees will be heading to the island of Molokaʻi on August 7th and 8th for a Community Meeting and Board Meeting in Hoʻolehua.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
In... this video, we take a journey to Kalaupapa and hear the stories of this remote ʻāina told by #CultureKeeper Mikiʻala Ayau Pescaia.
Coming from a family of storytellers, Mikiʻala uses her history and knowledge of Molokaʻi everyday as the Interpretive Park Ranger and Storyteller of Kalaupapa. Through moʻolelo, she inspires others to remember our history and rediscover the abilities and talents of our kūpuna.
Mikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
See MoreMikiʻala is featured in a web video series called Culture Keepers. Created by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Culture Keepers features the work and manaʻo of those who perpetuate Native Hawaiian culture. Follow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs for more videos and to connect with people, news and events in the Hawaiian community. #Moomeheu#Molokai
fyi
Governor David Ige
#TMT will NOT be nuclear powered. It will be connected to the local Hawaiʻi Island power grid. And TMT will NOT drill into any aquifers for cooling of any sort. Read about this and other FAQs here: https://www.maunakeaandtmt.org/facts-about-tmt/…
Governor David Ige
#TMT will NOT be nuclear powered. It will be connected to the local Hawaiʻi Island power grid. And TMT will NOT drill into any aquifers for cooling of any sort. Read about this and other FAQs here: https://www.maunakeaandtmt.org/facts-about-tmt/…
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/52057.htm Trump Blocks Food for Venezuela......
they can find jobs elsewhere.....
not their land!
Mililani Trask
One last point regarding Chad Baybayan. Here is the article and picture from 2013, regarding the "gift" from Subaru Telescope:
(Posted: Aug 13, 2013 - For refe...rence)
(Posted: Aug 13, 2013 - For refe...rence)
"Astronomers from Subaru Telescope last month donated $8,200, the equivalent of one million Japanese yen, to the Ka Haka ʻUla O Keʻelikolani College of Hawaiian Language at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo for the outfitting of a navigational canoe -- part of the College‘s Hōkū Alakaʻi voyaging program.
The donation was offered during a ceremony at the University on Thursday, July 31. Dr. Hiroshi Karoji, director of Subaru Telescope, presented the check to Chancellor Rose Tseng. Also present were Dr. William (Pila) Wilson, chair and professor of Hawaiian Studies, Chad (Kalepa) Baybayan, Hōkū Alakaʻi project coordinator, and Paula Thomas, interim director of development at UH Hilo.
"The Hōkū Alakaʻi voyaging program is developing a curriculum strong in math, science and Hawaiian culture that focuses on the traditions of maritime culture," Tseng explained. Drawing from astronomy, geography, history, marine science, mathematics, meteorology, and language and culture, the curriculum will provide students with a broad understanding and practical skills necessary to navigate an ocean-faring canoe. Part of the program involves building the vessel, a 57-foot double-hulled canoe now being built on Oʻahu that can accommodate roughly 30 people on coastal sails and a dozen for extended deep sea voyages.
"At this point in time, there is a need to invest in curriculum materials and instructional tools, such as a portable planetarium, to bring the science of astronomy and the art of navigation onto the canoe," Thomas noted. "This equipment is expensive and takes time to accumulate. The support from Subaru Telescope will enable us to outfit the canoe in a much shorter time."
"The ultimate goal of the program is to give students an understanding of how to build healthy communities by providing them the basic skills and self-confidence to become contributing stewards and quiet leaders, while attending to issues of sustainability and self-sufficiency, issues that all explorers, past and present, are faced with," Baybayan said.
"The gift from Subaru will help us acquire some tools for learning the sky," Wilson added. "There is much to learn.
"For example, the ancient Hawaiians had their own names for the constellations that they used to navigate the Pacific. And while the Hawaiians today are rediscovering how their ancestors navigated, one of things they do not know is what name went with what constellation."
"I am excited to see the canoe when it sails to the Big Island after its completion," said Karoji. "Simply learning the Hawaiian, older traditional names of stars gives you perspective on how people understood and used the sky over past centuries. This program is designed to allow students to explore the connections between traditional and contemporary knowledge. It is a pleasure to be able to contribute, in a small way, to the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo for the training of students who have the potential to navigate in this way."
This is the third donation that Subaru Telescope has made to UH Hilo. Last year, the Japanese astronomers provided a gift of equipment for the University‘s Department of Physics and Astronomy.
The Subaru gift comes from the Japanese Foundation for the Promotion of Astronomy, an independent organization that supports the outreach efforts of the astronomy community in Japan. The current administrative director of the foundation is Keiichi Kodaira, former director of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan."
See MoreThe donation was offered during a ceremony at the University on Thursday, July 31. Dr. Hiroshi Karoji, director of Subaru Telescope, presented the check to Chancellor Rose Tseng. Also present were Dr. William (Pila) Wilson, chair and professor of Hawaiian Studies, Chad (Kalepa) Baybayan, Hōkū Alakaʻi project coordinator, and Paula Thomas, interim director of development at UH Hilo.
"The Hōkū Alakaʻi voyaging program is developing a curriculum strong in math, science and Hawaiian culture that focuses on the traditions of maritime culture," Tseng explained. Drawing from astronomy, geography, history, marine science, mathematics, meteorology, and language and culture, the curriculum will provide students with a broad understanding and practical skills necessary to navigate an ocean-faring canoe. Part of the program involves building the vessel, a 57-foot double-hulled canoe now being built on Oʻahu that can accommodate roughly 30 people on coastal sails and a dozen for extended deep sea voyages.
"At this point in time, there is a need to invest in curriculum materials and instructional tools, such as a portable planetarium, to bring the science of astronomy and the art of navigation onto the canoe," Thomas noted. "This equipment is expensive and takes time to accumulate. The support from Subaru Telescope will enable us to outfit the canoe in a much shorter time."
"The ultimate goal of the program is to give students an understanding of how to build healthy communities by providing them the basic skills and self-confidence to become contributing stewards and quiet leaders, while attending to issues of sustainability and self-sufficiency, issues that all explorers, past and present, are faced with," Baybayan said.
"The gift from Subaru will help us acquire some tools for learning the sky," Wilson added. "There is much to learn.
"For example, the ancient Hawaiians had their own names for the constellations that they used to navigate the Pacific. And while the Hawaiians today are rediscovering how their ancestors navigated, one of things they do not know is what name went with what constellation."
"I am excited to see the canoe when it sails to the Big Island after its completion," said Karoji. "Simply learning the Hawaiian, older traditional names of stars gives you perspective on how people understood and used the sky over past centuries. This program is designed to allow students to explore the connections between traditional and contemporary knowledge. It is a pleasure to be able to contribute, in a small way, to the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo for the training of students who have the potential to navigate in this way."
This is the third donation that Subaru Telescope has made to UH Hilo. Last year, the Japanese astronomers provided a gift of equipment for the University‘s Department of Physics and Astronomy.
The Subaru gift comes from the Japanese Foundation for the Promotion of Astronomy, an independent organization that supports the outreach efforts of the astronomy community in Japan. The current administrative director of the foundation is Keiichi Kodaira, former director of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan."
https://iolani-theroyalhawk.blogspot.com/…/no-to-telescopes…. Take a Hike TMT
Amelia Gora shared live video.
3,691 Views
Healani Sonoda-Pale was live.
The dynamic duo testifying at the UH Board of a regents meeting Kahele Dukelow and Kaleikoa Ka’eo. 8/2/2019. #AoleTMT #AlohaMaunaKea
12,789 Views
Joshua Lanakila Mangauil
OVER WHELMING GENEROSITY!!
mahalo lāhui! We are Over loaded with donations of clothing, blankets ect.
We CANNOT Except Any further donations at this time! Huge... Mahalo e ka lāhui!
But we Just Cant Take anymore. Mahalo! Mahalo! Mahalo!
mahalo lāhui! We are Over loaded with donations of clothing, blankets ect.
We CANNOT Except Any further donations at this time! Huge... Mahalo e ka lāhui!
But we Just Cant Take anymore. Mahalo! Mahalo! Mahalo!
If you still wana make a controbution please make a donation on-line at https://paypal.me/hulinvda
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Alfred de Zayas
My interview with Press TV on the situation in Venezuela
https://dezayasalfred.wordpress.com/…/my-interview-with-pr…/
https://dezayasalfred.wordpress.com/…/my-interview-with-pr…/
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