On the Ocean or in the Garden, the Key Is Nurturing the Soul

Bruce Blankenfeld is initiated „pwo“ master navigator. Sam Low

Re-post from Sam Low ; Thursday, June 9, 2016 – 4:22pm

Sam Low

When Hokule’a sails into Vineyard Haven on Tuesday, June 28 the captain and navigator Bruce Blankenfeld will guide her to Tisbury Wharf. Bruce stands over six feet tall and he weighs under 180 pounds. He is well built but not showy. Thick black hair caps a long handsome face. His eyes are set deep under full lids. His shoulders are large, his waist is slim and his forearms are those of an outrigger canoe paddler.

Bruce became involved with Hokule’a in 1977 by volunteering on training sails, along with working on construction and repair of the canoe in drydock. Since then, he has voyaged more then 70,000 miles throughout Polynesia and Micronesia and on voyages to Vancouver, Alaska and Japan. In 2007, in a sacred ceremony on the tiny Micronesian island of Satawal, he was initiated into the rank of pwo (master) navigator by Mau Piailug, the man who taught all of Hokule’a’s navigators the ancient art of navigating without instruments by following signs in nature.

Bruce Blankenfeld

“Bruce is the most natural ocean person I think I have ever met,” said Nainoa Thompson, navigator and president of the Polynesian Voyaging Society. “When he leaves the land and goes to sea there is no adjustment time. No nothing. Bruce changes from the land to the ocean by becoming completely relaxed. He calms people down because he’s so calm and relaxed himself. If you took the ocean away from Bruce, you would take away half his life. He is just so innately inclined to the ocean.”

When Bruce is on land, which is not often now that Hokule’a is sailing around the world on a voyage to malama honua (care for the planet), he is often found in his garden tending taro, a plant that was at the center of ancient Hawaiian farming and remains so today.

“For Bruce growing taro is in his genes,” said Nainoa. “Caring for the land nurtures his soul. Whenever he’s in his taro, I don’t bug him. I walk right on by. It’s his soul that is being nurtured along with the taro.”

“In the old days,” Bruce said, “Hawaiians all worked together on the taro patches. Of course the life style was totally different. It wasn’t based on economics, it was based on mutual understanding and working together. It was based on the Hawaiian concept of malama, caring for each other. Everybody got together, they worked on farming and they reaped the benefits from it. And everybody also had their own little plots, their own little farm. In the old days people worked together in the fish ponds, the taro fields and the sweet potato gardens for the basic sustenance of everyone.”

Hawaiians like Bruce have learned from their ancestors that all life is tied together in a seamless web, a concept that scientists today might refer to as ecology. The Hawaiian landscape inhabited by Hawaiians — which they called an ahupua’a — grades from mountaintop to ocean with each of the separate ecological zones providing food and all the basic resources to sustain life. Hawaiians of old believed the ocean and the sea were not separate; they were part of a much larger natural whole.

“Every plant and animal in the sea has a counterpart on land,” Bruce said. “A mana opelu is a kind of taro named after the opelu fish, the spots on the stock of the taro are the same as the spots on the belly of the opelu. The Kumu fish and the aholehole fish have their counterpart on land as taro and also as a pig. The pig was often used as an offering to the gods but when there was no pig available you could use either a kumu or an aholehole from the sea in the offering. Everything that you see on land is tied to something in the sea.”

The Hawaiian concept of malama which underlies the voyage of Hokule’a emerges from this basic idea of the unity of all life.

“When they used to go to the mountains and cut down trees for the canoes, our ancestors didn’t think that they were taking the tree’s life. There were ceremonies for cutting the trees and addressing the appropriate spirits. They were not taking the tree’s life, they were just altering its essence, taking it from the forest and putting it into the sea. And in Hawaii the sea and the land are tied together. The sea and the land rely on each other for life just like a woman and a man rely on each other to bring forth new life. You pollute your ocean and you hurt the land. You pollute your land and the ocean is going to feel it. Everything relies on each other for life. Animals, fish, birds deserve the respect that you treat all life with. That’s basic. Everything that is living deserves your respect. That’s why you don’t go cut down forests or pollute your environment, everybody and everything is related somehow.”

To learn more about Hokule’a and her voyage around the world, visit hokulea.com. Hokule’a will visit Martha’s Vineyard from June 28 to July 1 at Tisbury Wharf. Mr. Low is a former Hokule’a crewmember and the author of Hawaiki Rising – Hokule’a, Nainoa Thompson and the Hawaiian Renaissance. He lives in Oak Bluffs.

 

Mahalo to:

Update to Ending Discrimination Against Hawaiian Nationals – 01.07.2020

Below is the just published update of the situation of SR 159
First I want to express my own thoughts:
Personally, I find it a shame that the „State legislature“ did not notice this particular change, or even wasted it! They were not aware of the importance and took it on the light shoulder. I wonder what’s really behind it? Didn’t the people who had to make the decision see the big picture? What are the motivations or facts that these people disagreed? Have they been manipulated by other „people“ or more? Why didn’t they want it? Questions come to me. So next week I’m trying to arrange an interview with Leon Siu and Poka Laenui to get more information and to discuss it.


Well, the State legislature had its chance to do the right thing, but the Senate Hawaiian Affairs committee chose kill SR 159, thus allowing discrimination against Hawaiian nationals.

The discussion showed again that these Hawaiian-American legislators are profoundly deaf, dumb and blind about the issue of NATIONALITY. No matter what we say, they think we’re asking them to create a new protected class or gain some kind of special privilege. They say this is not their kuleana, which is actually correct… they have no authority to create a new protected class or to recognize a sovereign nation. But that was not what we were asking them to do. What we very nicely saying is that your own laws say you’re not supposed to discriminate against a Hawaiian because of his/her nationality, just like you’re not supposed to discriminate against any other person because of his/her nationality. How hard is that?

The good thing is, the cat’s out of the bag. Just because the legislators chose ignore it, doesn’t make the problem go away. They can’t claim didn’t know about discrimination. We told them. Thus, they are now knowingly and willingly aiding and abetting discrimination.

Now that they blew their chance to make this right, it’s time to play hardball… CIVIL RIGHTS LAWSUITS! … stay tuned.

Comments and Questions:
  • Thk u Leon, this is showing how they dominate any legislation… mention it but drop it like a fly!
    You still was heard!
  • Why isnt the UN and NLG doing anything about it? Just curious.
  • This is the year we change the game. We need heirs to claim their ancestors lands and take
    control of the buildings that sit on those lands then activate our government and stop the fake state from carrying on their American ways.
  • Holllld up….if Hawaiian language is ok to use in court with a translator, then they recognize and are cognizant of our existence…so, what exactly is the problem? Because if the Corporation had <employment opportunities> with Filipino **nationals** on their military installations as civil jobs…why not extend that same diplomacy over to Hawaiian Kingdom Subjects? Oh…because we are not obligated to have any contracts with nuclear powers…
  • Mahalo Uncle Leon for everything you do for us and our future.
  • Leon Siu The legislators are acting deaf, dumb and blind so they don’t have to do anything about this huge problem of Hawaiian Nationality. The very presence of Hawaiian nationals is an existential threat to the State of Hawaii. The fact that Hawaiian nationals exist and are growing in numbers, is demolishing any U.S. claim to our Hawaii… Even with years of harassment, persecution, deprivation, strangulation and suffocation, they couldn’t make us go away… In fact, hardship has made us stronger and more determined. Sister Haunani Kay Trask in 1993 cut right to the chase when she declared at ʻIolani Palace, „We are not Americans“… „We will never be Americans“ … „We will die Hawaiians“… and I say, before we die… „WE WILL LIVE AS HAWAIIANS!“ EO! Aloha ʻĀina!
  • this legisloter not fm hawaii most of them from other state
  • That’s what I dont get she proposed it yet went backwards. It’s like waiving candy in front a keiki teasing them. Disgusted and now I mahalo them so much more because we rise higher! In stronger opposition mode! Still why isnt the UN and NLG stepping up more?
    Mahalo uncle Leon Siu
  • How was the vote broken down? Did they comment? What did they say?
    Mahalo for this important work, Leon Siu. In many ways, this is a good outcome, as it shows that a goodwill appeal was proactively made to the State for basic, decent recognition – and it was denied. This is a great addition to the list, to back up the position that we are trying our best to work toward peaceful resolution, in asking for international backup. Mahalo nui for doing all of this!
  • Leon Siu I watched their comments online. They tried to sound thoughtful and profound but were pretty inane. They were clueless about what the resolution was asking them to do. But itʻs okay because the resolution was like a trick question. No matter what the outcome, it establishes that discrimination is going on and the only question was how are you going to stop it? Itʻs like asking a public official, „Can you tell us, when did you stop beating your wife?“
  • Who’s on the SenateHawaiian Affairs Committee? Could be Asian colonial (local) attitudes prevail among them! Therefore, they would not or will (can) not understand the discrimination that exists toward na lahui!