An Article in the Star*Advertiser 8/7/2010

By Gary T. Kubota

Restoration of Mokuula Island and Mokuhinia Pond on Maui, home of the first three Kamehameha kings, has been proposed, creating a project some regard as significant as the restoration of Iolani Palace.

The nonprofit group Friends of Moku'ula has established a partnership with Maui County and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to restore the wetland area that, according to legend, was guarded by the lizard goddess Kihawahine.

"The restoration is at the same sort of level as Iolani Palace, because the kings resided at Mokuula. This was our former capital," said Shirley Kaha'i, acting executive director of Friends of Moku'ula. "It was a very sacred place."

Army Corps project manager Athline Clark said the Honolulu office plans to provide the planning and technical assistance throughout the entire restoration and consult regularly with the county and Friends of Moku'ula.

Clark said the corps is planning to analyze the surface soil at the site, which is a ball field, before deciding on the method of removing earth to begin to restore the pond, estimated to be about six feet from the surface.

A preliminary test indicated there were higher than normal traces of arsenic in the soil, and the corps is conducting further tests.

"We're making sure it's not significant," she said.

Clark said the corps will eventually be conducting hydrology tests and working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with the intent of bringing back the wetlands and native bird habitat.

She said early 1900s maps, sketching the location of the wetlands before they were filled by sugar firm Pioneer Mill Co., showed the pond was large. The area became the county Malu-ulu-o-lele Park in the early 1900s.

"There was a significant amount of wetlands, even more than Waikiki," Clark said. "The maps are pretty astounding as to what was there."

The islet was once occupied by Maui royalty and later by Big Island-born King Kamehameha I, who united the Hawaiian Islands under one kingdom.

In the early 1800s, Lahaina served as the capital of the Hawaiian kingdom.

Moku'ula and Mokuhinia had a political and spiritual connection, making it one of the most sacred places in Hawaii, cultural experts say.

Clark said the original pond, extending makai of Front Street, was larger than the park.

Bishop Museum has conducted studies of the site confirming the location of the Mokuula islet.

Friends of Moku'ula began the project in 1990 and developed support for it by conducting fundraisers and educational tours of Lahaina.

In the early 2000s, Maui Mayor James "Kimo" Apana announced his support for the project and opposed the development of a shopping center that extended into part of the pond.

Mayor Charmaine Tavares has been involved in supporting the project since she was the county park director and stopped park activities to allow archaeological digs.

County spokeswoman Mahina Martin, former program director for Friends of Moku'ula, said the Army Corps' participation in the project, which began to evolve last year, represents a "pivotal point" in the restoration.

"It underscores the county's commitment to restore the area," Martin said.


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Comments

  • Thanks Aina for the correction and sharing about 'Oheo' this is very important to know. This is a sacred place for me, with my two babies in my arms I went there to pray in the 70s, so that their father would be alive when we got back home to Oahu. I knew my prayers was answered and I can still feel the sensations till today. Mahalo, mahalo, mahalo
  • ALOHA Kaua, e Aina, Hawaiians by Federal Law need not pay to enter the National Parks of Hawaii. It was Congresswoman Pat Saiki who put this Federal Law in place. I know this to be True because I wrote Congresswoman Pat Saiki asking her why should Hawaiians have to pay to enter the National Parks of Hawaii? Congresswoman Saiki followed thru and had Hawaiians enter by law the National Parks of Hawaii, FREE OF CHARGE. The Federal Law is there. It is our rights as the Indigenous people of the Hawaiian Kingdom nation of Queen Liliuokalani to access the lands of our ancestors. After all, these lands belong to our people, without any "Blood Quantum" requirement.
    Long Live The Hawaiian Kingdom, o Pomaikaiokalani, Hawaiian Kingdom National Royalist 1993
  • STAFF
    Founder and Director Emeritus Akoni Akana
    akoni@mokuula.com
    Acting Executive Director Shirley Kaha`i
    hoohana@mokuula.com
    Office Assistant Anabelle Paet
    hoomanao@mokuula.com
    Cultural Consultant Hōkūlani Holt
    friends@mokuula.com


    Good job!
  • Doesn't one have to pay to go to your seven pools in Hana. Why can't we just have a Hawaiian care taker on the island like we use to have in our grave yards? Who is the culture interpretor? How close or far away from the piko? Is this national park to be accessible for people who want to do traditional prayers?
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