The economic pressures of living in Hawaii are mounting, so much so that more than 50% of Native Hawaiians are now living outside of the state.
Population data from the U.S. Census indicates that in 2020 there were some 320,000 Native Hawaiians living in Hawaii, which was about 47% of those living in the United States. In contrast, 53% of Native Hawaiians living in the U.S., some 360,000, lived in other states. That’s up from 2010 when 55% of Native Hawaiians lived in Hawaii and 45% in other states. Native Hawaiians are now about 23% of Hawaii’s population.
The U.S. Census found that the continental Native Hawaiian population is growing five times faster than the Native Hawaiian population in Hawaii. The five states outside of Hawaii with the highest counts of Native Hawaiians are California, Washington, Nevada, Texas and Oregon.
Expanding services to those living outside of Hawaii has become a hotly contested debate. Support, however, is growing to unite all Native Hawaiians and other indigenous cultures to protect what is theirs from government cutbacks, and more recently the shutdown.
Leaders of the Hawaiian Council, formally CNHA, subscribe to the strength in numbers argument — that’s why they took their convention on the road to Las Vegas in the fall of 2023 and today will kick off the start of pre-convention events for their Native Hawaiian Convention that runs Tuesday to Thursday at the Tulalip Resort Casino in Washington. More than 50 breakout sessions and workshops are planned and a pop-up Makeke retail store will feature more than 800 items from Hawaii-based small businesses.
Hawaiian Council CEO Kuhio Lewis said the goal is to unite Native Hawaiians living in Hawaii and the diaspora, the Native Hawaiians who have spread or been dispersed from their homeland. He wants to establish a national intermediary voice, especially one that is focused on economic sovereignty.
Lewis said the Hawaiian Council selected Tulalip as a venue given the number of Native Hawaiians living in the Pacific Northwest, as well as the chance to partner with the Tulalip Tribes, who understand Hawaii’s culture, people, and its connection to the land and water.
He said, “Tulalip is one of the most successful Northwest tribes in America. They’ve learned how to economically support their community.
“A lot of people resort immediately to political sovereignty, federal recognition or not, but there are other forms of sovereignty — economic sovereignty, health sovereignty, education sovereignty. I think we can learn a great deal from the Tulalip people.”
The 24th annual convention, which is the largest annual gathering of Native Hawaiians, has drawn more than 1,300 registered attendees from at least 37 states and four countries. More than half of the attendees came from Hawaii and a quarter came from Washington, while other top states were California and Oregon.
It’s the second time that the Hawaiian Council has held its convention on the continent and the first time it has held it on federally recognized tribal land.
Located north of Everett and the Snohomish River and west of Marysville, Wash., the Tulalip Indian Reservation was created to provide a permanent home for the Snohomish, Snoqualmie, Skagit, Suiattle, Samish and Stillaguamish tribes and allied bands living in the region.The tribal population is over 5,000 and growing, with 2,700 members residing on the 22,000-acre reservation, which has more than 50% of its land held in federal trust status.
The venue is an opportunity for the Hawaiian Council to learn how the Tulalip Tribes perpetuate their culture and drive the economics of the community through casinos and lodging. Teri Goben, chair of the Tulalip Tribes Board of Directors, will provide the convention’s opening remarks on Tuesday following an opening ceremony with the Hawaiian Council, the Tulalip Tribes, and Native Hawaiians from Hawaii and across the continent.
The Hawaiian Council, like the Native Hawaiian community that it represents, has differing views on federal recognition, which will be discussed Tuesday during a breakout workshop entitled “What is Federal Recognition?” Panelists, including Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) Interim Administrator Summer Sylva, Honolulu City Council member Esther Kia‘aina, and Breann Nu‘uhiwa, who advises and advocates for native governments and business enterprises, will discuss the current state of law for Native Hawaiians and how other indigenous people operationalize their sovereignty.
Economic sovereignty
Lewis said that he is more focused about what Hawaii can learn from the Tulalip Tribes about economic rather than political sovereignty.
The Tulalip Tribes also are looking to Hawaii for social and economic partnership opportunities, perhaps even in the gaming industry. A breakout panel entitled, “Gaming: Reclaiming wealth, and restoring the Lahui,” will be held on Wednesday at the convention. Panelists Brie Coyle Jones, Brandon Maka‘awa‘awa, and Anthony A. Marnell III will explore how gaming, led by Hawaiians for Hawaiians, can serve as a path toward reconciliation, economic sovereignty and community-led wealth.
Maka‘awa‘awa, who is the vice president of the Nation of Hawai‘i, where he assists Dennis “Bumpy” Kanahele in the operations of Pu‘uhonua O Waimanalo, told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, “Gaming might be something that might be able to unite Hawaiians. It gives us an opportunity to look at providing economic sovereignty for our people, but it must be done the right way and controlled by Hawaiians and not by outside corporations.”
Hawaii, along with Utah, are the only states with a total ban on gambling; however, gaming comes up every year at the state Legislature. So far, efforts to legalize gambling, even for Native Hawaiians, have been unsuccessful.
Talk of gaming was prominent in the Native Hawaiian community in 2021 when senators killed controversial Senate Bill 1321 that would have given the Hawaiian Home Lands Commission five years to figure out whether it wanted to permit any form of gambling on Department of Hawaiian Home Lands (DHHL) property on Oahu — whether it be a casino, lottery, bingo or even horse racing.
DHHL originally proposed to build a casino resort to generate millions of dollars to help clear the backlog of more than 28, 000 beneficiaries waiting for homes and land. DHHL’s proposal divided Home Lands beneficiaries and the commission itself, which voted 5 to 4 to forward the idea to the Legislature just before the start of the 2021 session.
Instead, in the 2022 legislative session, lawmakers appropriated a record $600 million to fulfill the promise to provide Hawaiians with homes.
The Hawaiian Council is pursuing more immediate economic opportunities like partnering with Tony award-winning Broadway producer Witzend Productions to premiere, “The Epic Tale of Hi‘iaka,” at the Hawaiian Convention on Wednesday. Hawaii’s top-selling female vocalist, Amy Hanaiali‘i Gilliom, will play Hi‘iaka’s sister Pele. Hanaiali‘i has 18 Na Hoku Hanohano Awards and is a six-time Grammy Award nominee.
Casting highlights also include Jana Alcain as Hi‘iaka, Starr Kalahiki as Kilinoe, and Moses Goods, from Apple TV+’s “Chief of War,” as the narrator.
Goods told the Star-Advertiser that he looks for projects like “Chief of War” and “Hi‘iaka,” where “Hawaiians are inviting people to the table because then it’s going to be something that we feel good about. I think less and less Hawaiians are putting up with the other way around. We don’t have to anymore. We can tell our own stories.”
Hanaiali‘i said the production has resonated with the cast, many of whom have ties to the story’s aumakua or deified ancestral spirits that manifest in the physical form.
“I’m the Kamohoali‘i line, which is Pele’s brother. I’ve never ever played one of my kupuna,” Hanaiali‘i said. “It’s a heavy kuleana (duty). It’s very humbling especially with her going off now every day over at Kilauea Crater.”
Goods and Hanaiali‘i say they are in talks to remain with the show pending other projects.
The full-length production is slated to open next year at Leeward Community College before moving to a permanent home in Ko Olina Resort, where the Hawaiian Council serves as cultural advisers and is working to curate activities on two parcels totaling 17.96 acres.
Strength in numbers
The Hawaiian Council wants to see the Native Hawaiian community in Hawaii and on the continent, as well as other indigenous people, especially the Tulalip Tribes, build relationships at the convention that amplify support for their shared causes.
Hawaii is facing a shortfall of $126 million in unpaid federal grants, with the government shutdown expected to exacerbate the situation, according to a report released Oct. 2 by the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization (UHERO).
UHERO found that some 74 federal grants to 59 Hawaii nonprofits are politically at risk, with more programs serving Native Hawaiians accounting for more than half of the state’s politically vulnerable funds.
The National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) also is deeply concerned about the federal government shutdown. It issued a statement Wednesday saying that it expects delays in funding, and reimbursements will slow the administration of critical programs like public safety and justice services, health care and behavioral health, child welfare and education, housing and infrastructure, emergency management, nutrition programs, and more.
Larry Wright Jr., NCAI executive director, said in a statement, “Shutdowns land hardest on our people. Tribal leaders do what they’ve always done: show up for their citizens, keep clinics open, protect public safety, and care for our elders and children.
“As sovereign governments we should not have to uphold these commitments we made to our citizens at the expense of federal inaction,” he said. “The United States must uphold its trust and treaty obligations regardless of the circumstance and without interruption.”
Given the current environment, the OHA is a major convention sponsor and is taking its Hawaiian Registry Program (HRP) on the road for the first time. Convention attendees will have the opportunity to verify their Hawaiian ancestry and immediately receive HRP cards, which are needed to apply for OHA loans, OHA grants, OHA programs, emergency financial assistance and indigenous programs on the U.S. mainland.
Visit oha.org/resources/hawaiian-registry or call OHA at 808-594-1835 for more information about what documents are needed to apply for the HRP card.
OHA Chair Kaiali‘i Kahele, who will deliver Wednesday’s keynote address, said in a statement, “It is important, maybe more so now than ever, that Native Hawaiians unite to defend and achieve the benefits they deserve and are entitled to. That’s why the OHA Board of Trustees approved funding to be a major sponsor for Hawaiian Council’s annual convention. We look forward to meeting kanaka (Native Hawaiians) from home and abroad to discuss the challenges and the opportunities we face together.”
Source: The Garden Island
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