Posted by Eo Lono! on November 28, 2008 at 2:31pm in Culture
Hau'oli La Ku'oko'a! EO! EO! EO!
HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY HAWAI'I!
Today is a day to remember, and truly give thanks! Let's sing along together in praise of our nation!
E Hawai'i nui kuauli!
E na hono a'o Pi'ilani!
O'ahu o Kakuhihewa!
Kaua'i o Manokalanipo!
Kaua'i o Manokalanipo!
E na'i wale no 'oukou
I ku'u pono 'a'ole pau
I ke kumu pono o Hawai'i
E mau ke ea o ka 'aina i ka pono
E mau ke ea o ka 'aina i ka pono
I ho'okahi kahi ka mana'o
I ho'okahi kahi pu'uwai
I ho'okahi kahi ke aloha
E malama i ka maluhia
E malama i ka maluhia
Mahalo e na akua, mahalo e na aumakua, me na ali'i o Ko Hawai'i Pae 'Aina. Mahalo e na kupuna o keia honua, a me na makua, a me ka lehulehu o ka la hui Hawai'i.
E malama oukou ia makou na pua, na o'iwi, na lei hulu mamo o Hawai'i.
We are free! We are sovereign in mind, body, and spirit! We are sovereign as a nation!
Happy Independence day to all of those who are e ala e! and living in their spirits, and on their land as free people of Hawai'i. On November 28th 1843; Kauikeaouli: King Kamehameha Ekolu and the sovereign nation of Ko Hawai'i Pae 'Aina was formally recognized by Great Britain and France by joint proclamation at the Court of London as a sovereign nation 165 years ago today.
This day officially marking our day of formal independence to the rest of the Western world. Many nations followed in formally recognizing our independence.
This is a day to celebrate and hold your banner's high. Our people are strong, and our nation is perpetual. E MAU KE EA O KA 'AINA I KA PONO! Sing all your ku'e songs today in celebration of our great ali'i. Let your voices ring out into the night as we celebrate our independence.
Hau'oli La Ku'oko'a! EO! EO! EO!
Hale Mawae
Eo Lono!
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Mahalo Hale Mawae. to add to your great sharing, I add Keanu's sharing to add to yours. Both are exceedingly informative and inspiring.
Tane
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Independence Day, La Ku'oko'a: Nov. 28
By Keanu Sai / Special to Ka Wai Ola
In 1842, Kamehameha III had a "very strong desire that his Kingdom shall be formally acknowledged by the civilized nations of the world as a sovereign and independent State." To accomplish this, he appointed Timoteo Ha'alilio, William Richards and Sir George Simpson, a British subject, as joint ministers plenipotentiary on April 8, 1842. Shortly thereafter, Simpson left for England, via Alaska and Siberia, while Ha'alilio and Richards departed for the United States, via Mexico, on July 8, 1842.
After Ha'alilio and Richards secured President John Tyler's assurance of recognizing Hawaiian independence on Dec. 19, 1842, the delegation proceeded to meet Simpson in Europe. On March 17, 1843, King Louis-Philippe assures them of France's recognition of Hawaiian independence, and on April 1, 1843, Lord Aberdeen, on behalf of Queen Victoria, assured the Hawaiian delegation that "Her Majesty's Government was willing and had determined to recognize the independence of the Sandwich Islands under their present sovereign." Confirming these assurances, Great Britain and France formally recognized Hawaiian sovereignty on Nov. 28, 1843, by joint proclamation at the Court of London, and the United States followed on July 6, 1844, by letter of Secretary of State J.C. Calhoun. Nov. 28 was a national holiday celebrating Hawaiian Independence, La Ku'oko'a.
On May 16, 1854, Kamehameha III proclaimed the Hawaiian Kingdom to be a neutral State, and it was expressly stated in treaties with Sweden-Norway in 1852 and Spain in 1863. As an internationally recognized sovereign and neutral state, the Hawaiian Kingdom joined the Universal Postal Union on Jan. 1, 1882, (today an agency of the United Nations) maintained more than 90 legations (embassies) and consulates throughout the world, and entered into extensive diplomatic and treaty relations with Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Bremen, Chili, Denmark, France, Germany, Great Britain, Guatemala, Hamburg, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, Peru, Portugal, Russia, Samoa, Spain, Sweden-Norway, Switzerland, the United States and Uruguay.
The year 1893 was to have been a festive year celebrating the 50th anniversary of Hawaiian independence. Instead, it was a year that the United States began to systematically violate Hawaiian sovereignty that resulted in the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian government and the prolonged occupation of the country since the Spanish-American War. Nevertheless, Nov. 28 was and still remains a national holiday.
Keanu Sai is completing his Ph.D. in political science at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa, specializing in Public Law and International Relations. His dissertation is titled The American Occupation of the Hawaiian Kingdom: Beginning the Transition from Occupied to Restored State.
Replies
Tane
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Independence Day, La Ku'oko'a: Nov. 28
By Keanu Sai / Special to Ka Wai Ola
In 1842, Kamehameha III had a "very strong desire that his Kingdom shall be formally acknowledged by the civilized nations of the world as a sovereign and independent State." To accomplish this, he appointed Timoteo Ha'alilio, William Richards and Sir George Simpson, a British subject, as joint ministers plenipotentiary on April 8, 1842. Shortly thereafter, Simpson left for England, via Alaska and Siberia, while Ha'alilio and Richards departed for the United States, via Mexico, on July 8, 1842.
After Ha'alilio and Richards secured President John Tyler's assurance of recognizing Hawaiian independence on Dec. 19, 1842, the delegation proceeded to meet Simpson in Europe. On March 17, 1843, King Louis-Philippe assures them of France's recognition of Hawaiian independence, and on April 1, 1843, Lord Aberdeen, on behalf of Queen Victoria, assured the Hawaiian delegation that "Her Majesty's Government was willing and had determined to recognize the independence of the Sandwich Islands under their present sovereign." Confirming these assurances, Great Britain and France formally recognized Hawaiian sovereignty on Nov. 28, 1843, by joint proclamation at the Court of London, and the United States followed on July 6, 1844, by letter of Secretary of State J.C. Calhoun. Nov. 28 was a national holiday celebrating Hawaiian Independence, La Ku'oko'a.
On May 16, 1854, Kamehameha III proclaimed the Hawaiian Kingdom to be a neutral State, and it was expressly stated in treaties with Sweden-Norway in 1852 and Spain in 1863. As an internationally recognized sovereign and neutral state, the Hawaiian Kingdom joined the Universal Postal Union on Jan. 1, 1882, (today an agency of the United Nations) maintained more than 90 legations (embassies) and consulates throughout the world, and entered into extensive diplomatic and treaty relations with Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Bremen, Chili, Denmark, France, Germany, Great Britain, Guatemala, Hamburg, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, Peru, Portugal, Russia, Samoa, Spain, Sweden-Norway, Switzerland, the United States and Uruguay.
The year 1893 was to have been a festive year celebrating the 50th anniversary of Hawaiian independence. Instead, it was a year that the United States began to systematically violate Hawaiian sovereignty that resulted in the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian government and the prolonged occupation of the country since the Spanish-American War. Nevertheless, Nov. 28 was and still remains a national holiday.
Keanu Sai is completing his Ph.D. in political science at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa, specializing in Public Law and International Relations. His dissertation is titled The American Occupation of the Hawaiian Kingdom: Beginning the Transition from Occupied to Restored State.