PACIFIC SUPERHEROES it has been one year since the illegal raids on Tuhoe by the NZ Police with unfounded charges of terrorism that could not be held up in court! With that in mind who are you gonna vote for in these upcoming elections? Something to keep in mind not for just tangata whenua, but all those who believe in keeping their civil liberties!
In Hawaiian the kanaka maoli (tangata whenua) have repeatedly had their rights and ‘civil liberties’ abused, challenged and extinguished from the U.S governments occupation of Hawaii Nei. Documentary maker, producer/director Anne Keala Kelly of Hawaii has researched and documented the U.S militaries occupation of the Hawaiian Islands in a documentary titled NOHO HEWA: The Wrongful Occupation of Hawaii.
Noho Hewa had its debut screening at the HAWAIIAN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2008 this month and walked away with the Halekulani Golden Orchid Award for Best Documentary. The following article gives a little more insight into the documentary. This is a programme we need screened in Aotearoa!!! Fingers crossed we can get some funding for Noho Hewa to voyage to Aotearoa!!!
Also big ups to Sima Urale for her short film ‘Coffee & Allah’ which won best short film at the HIFF!!! Woohoo!!! Mauri ora PACIFIC SUPERHEROES!!!
This is a writeup from the Star Bulletin
‘Noho Hewa” opens with this excerpt from the poem “Hawaii” by activist Haunani-Kay Trask:
“… Haole plover / plundering the archipelago of our world, / And we, gorging ourselves / on lost shells / blowing a tourist conch / into the wounds / of catastrophe.”
The poem is a most fitting summary of the film (an uncompleted version was viewed for this review), which explicitly illustrates that the phenomenon of colonialism extends beyond the physical occupation of the land or replacement of the culture.
Trask in fact goes so far as describing the strife facing Hawaiians as ethnic cleansing, adding “ethnic cleansing isn’t just something that they do physically to people, it’s something that happens in the mind.”
To explain this concept, producer and director Anne Keala Kelly uses examples of colonialism in Hawaii — bombings at Makua, the clumsy handling of burial sites during development, homelessness contrasted with the construction of multimillion-dollar gated communities — and illuminates them with discourse by numerous Hawaiian academics and activists.
“The destruction of the Hawaiian way of life used to look like a missionary holding a bible. This is what it looks like in the 21st century,” says Mikahala Roy of Kulana Huli Honua, as footage of construction rolls on the screen.
In response to homeless Hawaiians being evicted from public beaches, Trask says, “That’s just what ethnic cleansing establishes … You have no place to live. You do not have a home. You’re not there.”
For those uneducated about the issues “Noho Hewa” addresses, Hawaiian activists can appear to be unduly angry, their causes ridiculously unrealistic. But in taking a stand on the side of the Hawaiian cause, the film does an excellent job of providing context to their perspectives. And it even goes one step further: It conveys knowledge that resonates in the heart as well as the mind.’
Ohhhh I can’t wait!!! Keep ya heads up and show support by going to the links for Noho Hewa!
Mean!!! Thanks Tarewa for the introduction brother, mean education mean!!! ![]()











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