Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 9, Number 3, 1 Malaki 1992 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
' ^eTiice PaO®^X They don't have to eome to the mountain to be ahle to move one. Many participants in Kamehameha Schools' programs have never set foot on the Kapālama Heights campus. They may be elementary school students from Ni'ihau, learning to read and write in English through the Kamehameha Bilingual Project. Or maybe they're a family in Kona learning new ways to nurture the physical and intellectual deveb opment of their baby from a trained Kamehameha staff member. Perhaps they are four-year-olds enrolled in a Ma ili preschool, or retirees on Moloka'i who attend Kamehameha's Hawaiian Culture Lectures. Whoever and wherever they are, they all share in the legacy of Bernice Pauahi Bishop — a legacy whieh provides meaningful educational opportunities to more and more Hawaiians every year. Pauahi sought to empower the Hawaiian people through education. To give them the power to eontribute successfully to our society...the power to move mountains. Kamehameha Schools/Bernice Pauahi Bishop Estate ks/be sponsors this eolumn in the interest of helping people understand its role and mission.