Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 13, Number 3, 1 Malaki 1996 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Thf Mahf.i f. ihe overthrow. Land"Refoem." Andnow KuapA Isle.
; ... , ,, In the last two centuries, millions of acres of Hawaiian hmrihrcnitinsr th^4itw nf inr iumhie land have been taken from Hawaiians. The trasfic rwmrw?rvamrig *wt »*rr o history of abused Hawaiian ali'i property rights, that o3> Hawaii(ttts lmt amtro! <f 1hrir lamL, they lost their th'etikood CUStOmS and practices COnUnUCS. Again and again we find the government using its ;/ estabtishcd her educatimial trust ta W\ enstun that natwe itmd$ heip most extreme powers to satisfy a vocal minority, and achieve some short-term poliūeal goals. the ancestral lands of Ke Ali'i Pauahi, and m "^e^i^mihule" it to others. They eall it "mandatory C°nverS*°n Stealing is a strong term. But if you consider owner an immoial, unjustifiable practice, then Isn't it time we stopped repeating our history, ^^MnM f and started learning from it. Stop the stealing. Stop mundatory conversion. kamehameha schools bernice pauahi Bishop estate