Thursday, March 01, 2012

BURIAL REMOVALS DRAW PROTESTORS TO CHURCH

Demonstrators Say Kawaiaha`o Should Stop Disinterments

Honolulu Star-Advertiser - February 15, 2012

Nearly 40 demonstrators, some in skeleton costumes, protested the rising number of Native Hawaiian burial disinterments at Kawaiaha`o Church outside the historic institution known as “the Westminster Abbey of the Pacific.”

The group, mostly University of Hawai`i students, held signs and chanted in Hawaiian to voice their objections to the removal of iwi kūpuna, or ancestral remains, being carried out by Honolulu’s oldest church to make way for a $17.5 million multipurpose building.

More than 238 burials have been removed from the site with state permission.

Most disinterments have occurred since November, rising the ire of Native Hawaiians who say cultural tradition calls for them to protect their ancestors’ remains from disturbance even if they were buried in a Christian cemetery at a church established in 1842.

A Star-Advertiser story has disclosed the disinterment count through Jan. 21 reported to state officials by an archaeologist hired by the church.

The church declines to disclose such figures. A more up-to-date count hasn’t been available from the State Historic Preservation Division, but 14 burials a week have been unearthed on average over the past few months.


Protesters displayed more than a dozen signs with names of families with burials at Kawaiaha`o - Pilali, Ka`ahea, Adams, Shaw, Kapena, Kakelaka, Kuaea, Kanaumu, Godfrey, Buckle — to raise awareness about who might have relatives being disturbed.

The group also carried signs urging the church to cease disinterments. “Stop Digging Kawaiaha`o,” read one. “There’s life in the bones,” read another.

Some signs were more cutting, such as one in the shape of a coffin with the words “GRAVE RAIDERS” intersected on a cross.

“We are here to stand for who we are as a people,” said Zurishaddai “Z” ‘Aki, 25, one of several members of the UH student group Makawalu who donned skeleton masks to emphasize the connection to their cause.

“We came out today to show we’re not forgetting about our kūpuna,” said Punahele Kealanahele-Querubin, 21, a senior in UH’s Hawaiian Studies program. “We still carry the values that we have had for hundreds of years. To give up those values is giving yourself up as a Hawaiian. It’s just hewa (wrong). Just hewa.”




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