Wahi a kekahi lālā ‘aha’ōlelo lāhui no Hawai’i, “ua pilikia loa nā kai o ko kākou honua nei.”

Kā ka luna hoʻoponopono nota: Unuhi ʻia na Ākea Kahikina. Click here to read this article in English.

Ua kūkala ʻo Pelekikena Joe Biden ma ka Pōʻalua, e hoʻākea a hoʻonui aku ana ʻo ia i ke kiaʻi kūlohelohe ʻana i kekahi hui o nā moku mamao ma ka Pakipika Waena a me nā mile kuea he 777,000 ma ke kai a puni lākou. 

  • Civil Beat stories ma ka ʻōlelo Ჹɲʻ

E alakaʻi ana ʻo ia i ke kākauʻōlelo ʻoihana kālepa ma ka haku ʻana i kekahi puʻuhonua kai aupuni hou i loko o 30 lā a puni nā Moku Mamao Pakipika, ʻo ia hoʻi ka mea e hoʻokō ana i kāna pahuhopu . 

Ua mahalo ʻia kā Biden koho e a me nā lālā o ko Ჹɲʻ ʻahaʻōlelo lāhui, akā he mau leo hopohopo ko laila. 

ʻO ka mokupuni pālahalaha ʻo Palmyra, aia nō ia i 900 mile aku ma ka ʻaoʻao hema o Ჹɲʻ, a he māhele nō ia o ka Pacific Remote Islands National Marine Monument. (Na U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

“Ma o kona kākoʻo ʻana, hoʻohiki kēia hana i ke olakino maikaʻi o ke kaiaola kai o nā lāhulu, nā koʻa, nā manu kai, a me ka ʻohana kai nāna e hoʻomau aku i ka hana hoʻokele waʻa ʻana ma Moananuiākea,” wahi a Jonee Peters ma kekahi ʻōlelo hoʻolaha, ʻo ia hoʻi ka luna hoʻokō o . 

Ua kiaʻi ʻia nā mokupuni ʻo Johnston, Wake, Jarvis, Palmyra/Kingman, Baker a me Howland mai ka wā i kūkulu ʻia ai ka e Pelekikena George W. Bush ma ka makahiki 2009, ʻo ia hoʻi kahi i pāpā ʻia ai ka mine kai hohonu ʻana a me ka lawaiʻa nui ʻana ma ko lākou mau kai a 50 mile aku o ia mau kai. 

Ua hoʻākea aku ʻo Pelekikena Barack Obama i ke kia hoʻomanaʻo he pālima ma ka makahiki 2014 ma o ka hoʻolaulā ʻana aku i ka palena pekelala i 200 mile a puni nā mokupuni, koe aku ʻo Palmyra/Kingman, Baker, a me Howland. Ua hoʻonui ʻia aku ka wahi i kiaʻi ʻia i 495,189 mile kuea. 

Seabirds dive and forage in the Pacific Remote Islands. (Courtesy: Kydd Pollock/TNC)
Luʻu a ʻai nā manu kai ma nā Moku Mamao Pakipika. (Na Kydd Pollock/TNC)

Ma hope o ke kūpale ʻana i loko nō o ka papa luna hoʻokele a Trump, ʻo ia hoʻi ka mea nāna e ʻimi ana i ke kāpae ʻana i ke kiaʻi kia hoʻomanaʻo ʻana i laila a me kahi a puni ke aupuni, ua hōʻeuʻeu hou nā hui mālama ʻāina i kā lākou hana no ka hoʻokomo ʻia ʻana o nā wahi i waiho ʻia e Obama ma hope o ke kūʻē ʻana o nā hui lawaiʻa lehulehu ma Ჹɲʻ a me nā mea ʻē aʻe. 

“Ua pilikia loa nā kai o ko kākou honua nei, a aia nō kākou ma kekahi wā pōpilikia i hoʻomāhuahua ʻia e ka lawaiʻa ʻino ʻana a me ka hoʻonele ʻana i nā kumu waiwai ʻē aʻe, ka ʻōpala a me ka hoʻohaumia ʻāina ʻana, a hoʻonui ʻia hoʻi e ka hopena kai o ka hoʻohuli aniau,” wahi a ka Lunamakaʻāinana ʻo Ed Case ma kekahi ʻōlelo hoʻolaha. “Me he aupuni lā, he kuleana ko kākou e hoʻomau aku i ka pono o ko PRI waiwai he kaiaola, he ʻepekema, a he moʻomeheu.”

Ua kū ʻo Biden ma mua o ka hoʻohana ʻia ʻana o kona mana ma lalo o ka Antiquities Act, e like me kā nā pelekikena ʻē aʻe i hana aku ai ma ka hoʻākea ʻole ʻana i ke kia hoʻomanaʻo no nā Mokupuni Mamao Pakipika, i mea e hoʻokomo ʻia ai nā wahi i kiaʻi ʻole ʻia. 

Graduates and students of Kamehameha School onboard the Itasca, 4th expedition, January 1936. Back row, left to right: Luther Waiwaiole, Henry Ohumukini, William Yomes, Solomon Kalama, James Carroll. Front row, left to right: Henry Mahikoa, Alexander Kahapea, George Kahanu, Sr., Joseph Kim. (Photo courtesy George Kahanu, Sr.).  Photo Credit: Center for Oral History, Social Science Research Institute, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa and Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum.
Eia kekahi mau hāumana a pukana hoʻi o ke kula ʻo Kamehameha ma Ianuali 1936, a he mau lālā lākou o ka hui kāne Ჹɲʻ i kapa ʻia ʻo Hui Panalāʻau, ʻo ia hoʻi ka mea nāna i hoʻopaʻa i ka pono kelikoli ʻAmelika ma nā Mokupuni Mamao Pakipika ma mua o ke Kaua Nui ʻElua. (Center for Oral History, Social Science Research Institute, University of Hawaii Manoa and Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum) 

ʻO ke kūkulu ʻana i ke kia hoʻomanaʻo, ʻo ia nō ka mea e hāʻawi aku ana i nā Mokupuni Mamao Pakipika i nā “pono kānāwai i mōakāka leʻa” no nā kumu waiwai puʻuhonua a kākoʻo aku i ka pae kiʻekiʻe o ke kiaʻi ʻana e hana ʻia nei e ke kia hoʻomanaʻo kūikawā, wahi a kekahi ʻōlelo i hoʻolaha ʻia e ka Pacific Remote Islands Coalition. 

ʻO ka hui like ʻole i hoʻokumu ʻia ma ka makahiki 2014 no ke kiaʻi ʻana i ka māhele ʻāina, na ia hui e noi aku nei iā Biden e kapa hou i ua māhele ʻāina nei ma o kekahi kaʻina hana i kūpono i ka moʻomeheu a e hoʻokō i ka mālama pū ʻia ʻana e nā poʻe Pakipika ʻōiwi ma ke kaʻina hana. Ua noi hoʻi ka hui kuʻikahi i ka pelekikena e hoʻohanohano aku i ka hana nui a nā kāne Ჹɲʻ i kapa ʻia ʻo ka Hui Panalāʻau, ʻo ia hoʻi ka mea nāna i hoʻopaʻa i ka pono ʻona no nā mokupuna iā ʻAmelika ma mua o ke Kaua Nui ʻElua. 

, makemake ʻo Biden e hana pēlā. 

Me nā mile he 777,000 mile kuea, ʻo kēia puʻuhonua i hāpai ʻia, e haku ana ʻo ia i ka wahi kai nui loa e kiaʻi ʻia ana ma nā kai aupuni, wahi a ka PRI Coalition. 

ʻOi aku kēlā nui ma mua o Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, ʻo ia hoʻi ka mea nāna e kiaʻi i nā mile he 583,000 mile kuea a puni nā moku mamao o Ჹɲʻ. ʻO ia nō ka wahi kai nui loa i kiaʻi ʻia ma kona wā i hoʻākea ʻia ai e Obama ma ka makahiki 2016

Animation of the changing Pacific Marine Monument boundaries
Hōʻike mai kēia palapala ʻāina i ka loli ʻana i nā palena ma nā kia hoʻomanaʻo ma o ka hala ʻana o ka wā. (April Estrellon/Civil Beat/2023)

Ua kūkala aʻe hoʻi ka pelekikena ma ka Pōʻalua, e hoʻolaha aku ana ʻo ia i ka no ka manawa mua loa, a e hoʻokomu ana ʻo ia iā Avi Kwa Ame ma Newada a me Castner Range ma Teseta me he kia hoʻomanaʻo lā “no ka hōʻike leʻa ʻana i ke ʻano maoli o ke aupuni.” 

I loko nō o ka mahalo ʻia ʻana o kā Biden hana mālama ʻāina ʻana, ua hoʻohalahala kekahi mau kānaka i kona “hoʻokamani aniau,” wahi a ke Associated Press. Ua ʻākoakoa aku nā mea hoʻouluulu ma waho o ke Keʻena Kūloko, ʻo ia hoʻi kahi āna i haʻi ʻōlelo aku ai, me ke koi ʻana iā ia e kāpae i kona hoʻāpono ʻana i ka papahana ʻeli ʻaila ma ʻĀlaka. 

Ua kākoʻo ʻia kēia papahana e ka ʻOhana o Harry Nathaniel, Levani Lipton, ka ʻOhana Mar, a me Lisa Kleissner.

Support Independent, Unbiased News

Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in Ჹɲʻ. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.

 

About the Author