Hula is in my genes; I come from a hula ohana. My toys were miniature versions of hula implements like the uliuli (feather gourd), ipu (gourd drum), kalaau (wooden sticks), puili (split bamboo rattles) and iliili (pebbles). They were just the right size for my toddler hands, and I’ve kept some of them to this day.”
Kaiulani Kauahi fondly recalls growing up with hula. Her grandmother Sarah Kawahinealiiopuna Kaina Caminos opened Kanoe’s Hula Studio in 1920 in Wahiawa. When she died, Kauahi’s mother, Marguerite Emmalani Vincent, and her aunt Ruth Walea continued the halau (school) as its kumu hula (teachers).
“I made my hula debut was when I was 3 years old at a private party and taught my first class when I was 12 years old, under the watchful eye of my mother,” Kauahi said. “Our halau also performed at carnivals, parades, school fundraisers and other community events. At one time my mother taught hula to Leilehua High School’s football team. Like other forms of dance, it helps with timing, coordination, agility and flexibility.”
Today, Kauahi is kumu hula of Kanoe’s Hula Studio, where she schedules classes around her day job as culture and arts coordinator for Honolulu’s Department of Parks and Recreation. When Mayor Kirk Caldwell charged the department with developing Ka Papa Ma Kai (“classes by the sea”) in July, Kauahi spearheaded the planning, knowing hula would be among the activities offered.
“Hula is internationally recognized, so I thought it would be good to teach our haumana (students) the basics,” she said. “Dancers make it look effortless; however, your body works really hard to maintain the positions and do the gestures and foot and hip movements.”
Kauahi also thought Hawaiian language was an important topic to cover. Participants discover that even a slight mispronunciation can change the meaning of a word. The hands-on craft element of the program lets students take home something to remind them of Hawaii and what they learned.
Designed as a 10-week pilot project, Ka Papa Ma Kai launched Sept. 2. Wednesday marks its midway point; after the final session Nov. 4, the weekly program will be evaluated to determine whether to make it permanent.
Kauahi and two other parks department staffers, Alex Ching and Samantha Sun, are the program’s instructors. During September they focused on the kukui, Hawaii’s state tree. The final five sessions will revolve around the makahiki, which was observed long ago from October through February in honor of Lono, the god of rain and fertility.
Work and warfare weren’t allowed during those months; rather, it was a time of peace for sports, feasts, dancing, religious ceremonies and strengthening ohana and community bonds.
During the upcoming classes, participants will learn the Hawaiian words for several makahiki games and play some of the games, including konane (checkers), kaula (a string game akin to cat’s cradle) and palaie, where players toss and catch a cloth ball with a loop and stick made of braided coconut midribs (the ball was originally made of tapa).
And, of course, they will learn a hula.
“Ka Papa Ma Kai is a wonderful opportunity for visitors and kamaaina to meet, talk story and learn about Hawaii’s culture in a beautiful setting by the sea,” Kauahi said. “There’s no need to register; just come, enjoy and make new friends as you learn about some of the things that make our island home special.”
IF YOU GO …
Ka Papa Ma Kai
>> Place: Pavilion No. 2 at Kuhio Beach Park (ocean-side, across from Pacific Beach Hotel, 2490 Kalakaua Ave.) >> Days: Wednesdays through Nov. 4 >> Time: 9 a.m. to noon >> Cost: Free >> Phone: 768-3041 >> Email: rkauahi@honolulu.gov >> Website: www.honoluluparks.com
In addition …
Following its motto, “We Add Quality to Life,” Honolulu’s Department of Parks and Recreation offers a variety of classes at some of the 21 pools and 286 parks that it oversees on Oahu.
Available free or for a nominal fee, these run the gamut from ceramics, ukulele and cooking to surfing, photography and tai chi.
For more information, email parks@honolulu.gov, visit bit.ly/1NartKd or call the appropriate district office:
>> District I (Hawaii Kai to McCully), 373-8013 >> District II (Makiki to Aiea), 522-7074 >> District III (Pearlridge to Waianae, including parks from Waipahu through Wahiawa), 675-7130 >> District IV (Waialua to Waimanalo), 233-7300
Kuhio Beach Park
Kuhio Beach Park was originally part of Pualeilani (“flower from the wreath of heaven”), the home of Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole and his wife, Princess Elizabeth Kahanu. Kuhio was elected as Hawaii’s second delegate to Congress in 1902, a position he held until his death. He is best known for helping to create and pass the 1920 Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, which provides 99-year homestead leases to Native Hawaiians at an annual cost of $1.
In July 1918 Kuhio opened a beautiful beachfront area of Pualeilani to the public, and when he died in January 1922, it was given to the city. Named in honor of the prince, Kuhio Beach Park (situated between the Moana Surfrider and the Kapahulu Groin, a walled storm drain that juts into the ocean) was dedicated in 1940.
Bodyboarders congregate in the ocean fronting the park. Offshore to the west are two famous surfing sites, Queen’s (named after Queen Liliuokalani, Hawaii’s last ruling monarch) and Canoes (referring to the outrigger canoes that still skim the waters of Waikiki today).
Three landmarks are at the park: a statue of Prince Kuhio sculpted by Sean Browne and dedicated Jan. 12, 2002; a statue of Duke Kahana- moku by Jan-Michelle Sawyer dedicated Aug. 24, 1990, the 100th anniversary of the great waterman’s birth; and the Stones of Kapaemahu, also known as the Wizard Stones, which represents four renowned healers — Kahaloa, Kinohi, Kapuni and Kapaemahu — who supposedly came to Hawaii from Tahiti around A.D. 400.
Park facilities include picnic tables, a snack bar, restrooms, outdoor showers and concessions offering surfing lessons, outrigger canoe rides and beach equipment rentals.
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evenings, weather permitting, a free torch-lighting ceremony and hula show take place at the Kuhio Beach Hula Mound on Kalakaua Avenue near Uluniu Avenue, diagonally across from the Hyatt Regency Waikiki Beach Resort and Spa, 2424 Kalakaua Ave.
The hourlong program starts at 6:30 p.m. (6 p.m. in November, December and January).
Seating is on the grass (towels, mats and low-rise chairs are allowed). For more information, call 843-8002.
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Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi is a Honolulu-based freelance writer whose travel features for the Star-Advertiser have won several Society of American Travel Writers awards.