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The Hawaiian Kapu System of law was
seriously challenged when foreigners began to arrive in Hawaii. Captain
Cook's arrival in 1778 opened the islands to the rest of the world and
signaled the end of the ancient culture. Even though the white persons
who came to the islands did not abide by the rules of the kapu
system, they were not punished by the gods.
In 1795, the young chief, Kamehameha I conquered the islands (with the exception of Kauai) to create a unified kingdom. He attempted to rule the kingdom using the ancient system of kapu, but it became very difficult with the influx of foreigners. |
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The Monarchy
years generally span the period of time between the unification of all
the islands by Kamehameha the Great in 1810 and the overthrow of the
Hawaiian government in 1893. During this relatively short period of
time, the people of Hawaii would be transformed from a society based on
the Kapu System into an independent constitutional monarchy,
recognized by other nations around the world.
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In 1819, King
Kamehameha II declared an end to the kapu system. In a dramatic
and highly symbolic event, Kamehameha II ate and drank with women,
thereby breaking the important eating kapu. Soon after, the
sacred heiau (temples) were destroyed and the images of gods
were burned. As word of these events spread throughout the Islands, the
kapu system rapidly unraveled. With the kapu
system abolished, the missionaries found the Hawaiians living in a
cultural void and receptive to the ideas embodied in Protestant
Christianity.
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To aid in converting a society with
an oral tradition to Christianity, the missionaries developed an
alphabet for the Hawaiian language, began translating the Bible, and
started printing other important information in large quantities for
many Hawaiians to read. In less than 20 years, the missionaries had
established a school system that reflected Western society and the
Protestant religion.
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The concept of land ownership was
foreign to ancient Hawaiians. Under their holistic view of the world
that incorporated all things from the ocean to the sea, no one owned
the land. Instead the land was divided into ahupuaa, land sections that usually
extended from the mountain summits down through fertile valleys to the
outer edge of the reef in the sea (for example a large valley). The alii (chiefs) were stewards of the land
and granted the makaainana (general populace) living in the ahupuaa use of the land's bounty for their
livelihood. Headmen (konohiki) facilitated day to day operations
with the assistance of specialists (luna). The ahupuaa formed a self-contained economic
and social unit that effectively integrated the uses of its resources
from dispersed ecological zones. Everyone living throughout the ahupuaa had access to all types of products
and everyone was entitled to a share of what they produced from the
soil or took from the sea. The system benefited the land because the ahupuaa was managed carefully, and thought
of and cared for as a whole. Today, this ancient system is viewed by
many as an excellent model of resource management.
When Kamehameha the Great brought all the islands under his control, he had kept the traditional land system in existence. Now, with Cook's introduction of Hawaii to the Western World, a market economy began to emerge. Fur and sandalwood traders, merchants, whalers, and missionaries accustomed to owning land pressured the King, Kamehameha III, to change the ahupuaa system of land tenure and permit private ownership of land. The Great Mahele (land division) of 1848 instituted a system of private property ownership that ended the old land system. The new law divided Hawaii land among the Crown, the government, the alii (chiefs) and konohiki (headmen). Concern for the commoners' rights resulted in the Kuleana Act of 1850 which permitted land ownership by commoners who occupied and improved any portion of the lands controlled by the alii and konohiki. Additionally, Government Lands were made available for purchase by commoners and foreigners who did not have kuleana rights. Within decades, title to thousands of acres had fallen into the hands of non-Hawaiians. Even the Crown lands, owned by the King and his successors, were often sold or leased to foreigners in payment of debts or in exchange for foreign goods and supplies. When, in 1893, the Hawaiian Monarchy was overthrown and Queen Liliuokalani was taken prisoner, the remaining Crown Lands were confiscated by the new government and made part of the public domain. Today, the overthrow of the queen and the confiscation of the lands are the foundation of the Hawaiian Sovereignty Movement. There is archaeological evidence to indicate that the first peoples arrived in the Hawaiian Islands around A.D. 400 or before. Estimates of the maximum ancient Hawaiian population vary from 200,000 to as high as a million by the date of the European "discovery" by Captain James Cook. The decline of traditional Hawaiian culture went together with a dramatic decline in the population of native Hawaiians. Thousands died from the many new diseases brought by Westerners; other thousands left to work aboard trading and whaling ships. Unfortunately, Hawaiians, an isolated people, were unusually vulnerable to introduced diseases: smallpox, measles, Hansen's disease, whooping cough, influenza, gonorrhea, took their toll. By 1920, pure Hawaiians numbered only 23,723 and their life expectancy was only 35 years! |
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The decline in the population of
native Hawaiians became a serious labor problem as foreign-introduced
sugar and pineapple plantations began to grow and flourish. When the
shortage became critical in the mid-1800's the Hawaiian government
supported the recruitment and importation of laborers from abroad. This
resulted in a flood of more than 250,000 foreign laborers during the
three decades following Annexation (1898). The majority were from
Japan, China, and Portugal and, after the turn of the century, from
Korea and the Philippines. By 1900, because of this immigration and
their decline in population, pure Hawaiians constituted only a small
part of a larger, multi-ethnic society. Today, some think the number of
pure Hawaiians could be as low as 5,000. Pure Hawaiians have become
strangers in their own land. However the part Hawaiian population now
measures over 230,000 reflecting the diversity of today's multi-ethnic
society in Hawaii.
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TODAY, there is a resurgence of the Hawaiian culture. Hawaiians are grappling with their role in the world and are reaching back to their roots to redefine their identity. |
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