HAWAIIAN INDEPENDENCE DAY OBSERVED
A Hawaiian sovereignty organization held an event at `Iolani Palace today to commemorate the day 163 years ago when Great Britain and France formally recognized Hawai`i as an independent nation.
Lynette Cruz, a spokeswoman for the group The Living Nation, said that Nov. 28, 1843, was known as La Ku'oko'a, Hawaiian Independence Day, and recognized as a holiday by the Hawaiian monarchy.
But it was eliminated in favor of the American Thanksgiving by the Republic of Hawai'i in 1895, two years after the overthrow, she said.
The Living Nation gives much of the credit to Timoteo Ha`alilio, an ali`i and confidante to King Kamehameha III, who led a delegation through the U.S. and Europe in search of a treaty that would recognize Hawai'i as a sovereign nation, Cruz said.
"The idea was that in order for Hawai`i to become recognized as a member of the family of nations, (a treaty) had to be brought back," she said.
The U.S. did not sign the treaty but issued the 1842 Tyler Doctrine, a unilateral American policy that recognized Hawai`i as an independent nation.