Incredible Hawaii. Terence Barrow

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Incredible Hawaii - Terence Barrow


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Hawaiians are of this sailor stock of courageous men and woman who settled Polynesia.

      3 The Hawaiian canoe

      MAKING CANOES WAS AN OUTSTANDING POLYNESIAN skill. Large ocean-going canoes carried the first immigrants to Hawaii from the Marquesan and Society Islands. Once settled, the Hawaiians developed canoes suitable for inter-island travel, war and off shore fishing.

      Canoes (wa’a), were vital to daily life. In 1778 there were thousands in use in Hawaii. Over 3,000 came to greet Captain Cook’s ships when they anchored in Kealakekua Bay.

      Island travel was for trade, political or social purposes. Channels were rough. Only seaworthy canoes were safe when trade winds pressed against contrary currents. Some canoes were sailed with tailored sheets of pandanus matting. Others were paddled or both paddled and sailed. The smallest fishing canoes could be handled by one or two men; the largest war vessels could carry a hundred or more people. Many war canoes in the conquering navy of Kamehameha I were large enough to mount light European cannon of several kinds.

      Canoe makers knew how to use their stone adzes and secure the aid of the gods. At every stage from felling the tree to finished vessel any mistake in ritual endangered the mana or “good luck” of the canoe and the life of the maker himself.

      4 The demi-god who fished up islands

      MAUI, THE SUPERMAN WHO FISHED UP ISLANDS AND performed many remarkable tasks, is known to Pacific islanders of Polynesia, Melanesia and Micronesia. Maui is one of the most lovable of all characters in

      Polynesian mythology because of his genial, mischievous nature. Often called “Maui-of-a-thousand-tricks,” he well deserves this nickname.

      Some stories say that Maui was still-born of a human mother, then cast into the sea, from which he emerged alive. He certainly was a supernatural child with godlike powers. In Hawaiian mythology he appears in relation to a specific place, such as Waianae on Oahu, at a cave above Hilo on the Wailuku River, and at Kahakuloa and Kauiki on the island of Maui.

      He is said to have secured fire for mankind and lengthened the daylight hours by snaring the sun, which pleaded for life with the promise it would go slower across the sky in the future. Maui is also credited with pushing up the sky, but his most notable habit was that of fishing up islands from the sea bottom. The place where his sacred fishhook caught is known on some Pacific islands.

      The 19th-century recorders of Hawaiian myths seem to have regarded the Maui stories as too childish to write down, so many of the tales of superman Maui are lost forever.

      5 Drifting islands of Hawaii

      THERE HAVE BEEN MANY THEORIES TO EXPLAIN THE origin of the Hawaiian chain of islands. Before modern geophysical studies of the floor of the world’s oceans, a theory prevailed that the surface of the earth was a more or less immovable crust. The Hawaiian Islands were believed by some to be formed by outwelling lava as a great rift or crack opened on the sea bottom. It now appears more likely that tectonic plates of earth’s crust drift around the globe at a rate of about seven feet per century.

      According to the latter theory the vast Pacific plate on which Hawaii sits glides over the earth’s semi-fluid under-crust like a gigantic raft, and as this plate passes over a “hot spot” lava vent, islands are formed. The Big Island of Hawaii is now passing over this great vent and is thus still in formation. Some day Hawaii, like the other islands, will have moved on, and a new island will start to form. Islands appear to glide off in a northwest direction, riding on a giant plate which at its upper end moves under Japan and Asia, causing earthquakes from time to time.

      The Hawaiian Islands have been in the process of creation and dissolution for about 20 million years. The earliest undersea volcanic mountains to break sea surface now stretch about 2,000 miles to the northwest of the Big Island, some worn down to rocky pinnacles or eroded to water-level reefs.

      6 The little people of the night

      THE FIRST INHABITANTS OF THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS ARE the Keiki-o-ka’aina (Children of the Land), little night creatures better known to Hawaii residents as Menehune.

      They are said to have lived in Hawaii before the Hawaiian ancestors arrived, and are still about. Reports of them are made from time to time today. The Menehune are described as a squat and rather ugly pigmy race with many of the traits of European elves, pixies, fairies, gnomes and trolls. They are known in all Polynesian islands. The Manahune of the Society and Cook Islands are of the same little race. The island of Kauai is said to be their original Hawaiian home.

      Menehune are said to dislike being seen by mortals, yet some make human friends and generally children seem inoffensive to them. They do mankind favours if well treated, making in past times stone temples, fishponds and watercourses. In fact, they seem to enjoy working. They are gregarious, noisy, talkative little fellows, often up to some mischief; yet they prefer to live in lonely valleys, in the mountains, in caves, hollow logs or primitive huts.

      The Menehune are believed to be supernatural creatures who have a distinct dislike of daylight. Where they came from and how many still live is quite unknown.

      7 Animal guardians of Hawaii

      SUPERNATURAL SPIRITS AND GODS WERE AS REAL TO the old Hawaiians as the actual world. Nothing of importance was done without consulting occult, unseen beings. Some of these are aumakua, a class of ancestral guardians who inhabit the bodies of certain animals.

      The three most favored aumakua were the shark, lizard and owl. The family that adopted one particular creature as its aumakua would not eat or harm it as it was considered a protective guardian. The shark was a fearful guardian to whom the dead were sometimes fed to appease its spirit. Once a woman was grasped at the ankle by a shark that was her family guardian. She cried out its name and it let her go with an apology for its mistake. Shark guardians aided their patron family by driving fish into nets and warding off evil.

      Lizards in the form of geckoes were also very effective guardians. Animal guardians were friendly to the family that adopted them and unfriendly to family enemies.

      The flight of the owl or pueo was watched for an omen of good or evil. To this day some Hawaiians remember their family guardian and treat it with respect.

      8 Dogs that did not bark

      LONG AGO THE DOG AND THE PIG WERE BROUGHT FROM tropical Polynesia as food, and the rat came as an undesirable stowaway. The only land mammal at that time in Hawaii was a native bat, too small to eat. It is said the Hawaiian dog did not bark. Named 'ilio, it lived on a diet of fish, coconut, scraps and poi-hence the name “poi dog” now given to any dog of doubtful ancestry. This old dog is pictured in rock art as a long, low-slung animal with a back curling tail. When the haole or foreign dog was introduced, the Hawaiian dog became extinct as a separate species because of inbreeding and changed food habits.

      The Hawaiian dog probably made whining or singing sounds like the “barkless” dogs of New Guinea to be seen in the Honolulu Zoo. At tabu times their snouts were tied to silence them. They were food, rarely companions, while their flesh was preferred to pork. The Reverend William Ellis in Hawaii in the 1820’s saw 200 dogs baked for a single feast.


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