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Jack Jeffrey Photography

‘O ka lale au o Kaiona
I nonoho i ka malu ‘ohai
I am the sweet voiced bird of Kaiona
Who dwells in the ‘ohai shade


The mythical lale, a bird for which we have no other name or referent, is remembered in chant and story for the beauty of its song. Lale also means “to encourage, urge, stir to action.” Kaiona, the benevolent goddess of the Wai‘anae Mountains, served as inspiration for the best known of Bernice Pauahi’s chant names – Ka Wahine Hele Lā o Kaiona, The Woman Who Walks in the Sunlight of Kaiona.

Ka Lale o Kaiona is dedicated to intelligent discussion of Hawaiian poetry and to a renewed understanding of the words to which the lale of our kūpuna gave sweet voice. We feature four mele in each four-month volume of our forum: their texts, translations, backgrounds, and interpretations. Beginning with volume 2 – the current, March to June issue of Ka Lale – we encourage you, in turn, to contribute to this discussion with thoughts, connections, critiques, and memories of your own.

We hope that our dialog will help to correct an egregious flaw in the conventional, classroom wisdom of our day: that mele Hawaiʻi belongs to a second-class literature unworthy of serious study and appreciation. It is, in fact, helu ‘ekahi: rich, deep, and wonderfully nourishing. It is the beloved poi ‘uoʻuo that feeds our naau and sustains the nexus of our Hawaiian intellect and emotion.

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Jack Jeffrey Photography
 






 
‘I‘iwi a‘o Hilo
The 'i'iwi is a spectacular, orange-red bird with black wings and a long, curved, salmon colored bill. It was once common in the forests of all the islands but is now limited, for the most part, to the 4,000-7,000 ft. elevations of the forests of Hawai'i, Maui, and Kaua'i.
>Read the full article



 
Jack Jeffrey Photography  
Ka Nani a‘o Hilo
"Ka Nani ao Hilo" is Johnny Almeida's re-interpretation of the considerably longer mele "Kāua i ka Nani o Hilo," a frequently appended and revised chant for Kalākaua that was probably first composed in the early 1880's by Princess Kekaulike Kinoiki II and Keahinuiokilauea.
>Read the full article



   
Kīhei de Silva    

Ka Ua a‘o Hilo
Many of the songs that Kawai Cockett first released 30 years ago were applauded tearfully by people who hadn't heard them in years. This is because Kawai's mentors were among the best of that generation's old-timers: Johnny Almeida, Pauline Kekahuna, Henry Pa, Vickie Ii, and Alice Namakelua.
>Read the full article







   
Hawai'i State Archives    

Nani ka Huila o Kīlauea
The Kīlauea was a propeller-driven, sail-assisted, inter-island steamship that carried passengers, goods, and livestock during the reigns of Alexander Liholiho, Lot, Lunalilo, and Kalākaua.
>Read the full article

 

 


     

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