Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 35, Number 5, 1 May 2018 — Habitat puts substance abuse counselor back on her feet [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
Habitat puts substance abuse counselor back on her feet
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By Treena Shapiro Varna Nakihei opened a nonprofit residential aleohol and drug treatment program on Moloka'i in 1996 to give people on her home island a plaee to recover from addiction. Now 26 years sober and living on Maui, Nakihei spent some of the early 1990s addicted to drugs and aleohol, living on the street while leaving her children in her parents' care. When a judge issued a bench warrant for her on Moloka'i, she fled to O'ahu. "In Honolulu, when I was living on a beach, I realized in needed really serious help," said Nakihei, 58. "I was literally done," Ho'omau Ke Ola, a cultural-ly-based treatment program in Wai'anae, gave Nakihei a new lease on life. An important lesson they imparted was that she was Hawaiian first, before she was an addict. They also understood that a sterile office wasn't the right environment for her recovery and conducted her counseling sessions while she swam in the oeean, fished or worked a lo'i. "I found out who I really was and I'm very proud to say I am a Hawaiian and nothing's going to change that," she said. After five or six years, Nakihei returned to Moloka'i and started a treatment program there. "We needed something on this island, on Moloka'i, because a lot of us who have a problem with drugs and aleohol have to go off island," she pointed out. In 1996, she leased land from the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands and eonverted a two-story, five-bedroom house into a treatment center. But a job on Kaho'olawe took her to Maui, where she eventually settled - although not in her own home initially. Habitat for Humanity Maui helped Nakihei on that front. Despite having a regular payeheek, she wasn't earning enough
to pay rent. For a year, she and her mo'opuna, or grandchildren, stayed with various friends and family. After seeking llnaneial assistance from Women Helping Women, Nakihei heard about Habitat for Humanity. She didn't think mueh of it at the time, despite passing Habitat's office every day on her way to work. "You imagine us Hawaiians, how pa'akikī we ean be, how stubborn and hard-headed," she said. "Finally after three months something told me, 'Why don't you stop? Stop at Habitat. You ain't got nothing to lose, In fact you've lost everything already,'" she told herself. So she let go of her pride and stopped. "Fm so glad I stopped because when I did the doors just flew open for me," she said. After two hours and a lot of paperwork, Nakihei was told she might qualify for one of nine eondominium units at Harbor Lights. While initially put off by the neigh-
borhood, she realized, "I no care already. I just need a roof over my head." Instead of moving into her car, as she thought she might need to do, she moved into a condo eight months later. "I've been here since 2013 and this was the best thing that ever happened to me," said Nakihei. The only thing she misses is a plaee to work the 'āina. "Other than that, I'm happy. I have stability. My grandchildren ean jump on my bed and I don't have to (scold) them because it's somebody else's house. I ean leave dishes in the sink, turn
my TV on loud, walk around. . . you know," she said, laughing. "We are so proud of Varna to eome all the way from just about homeless to being such a positive impact on so many other lives. She
really keeps paying forward," said Habitat Maui's Community Relations and Development Director Max Tornai. Habitat for Humanity Maui stands on the front lines of the affordable housing crisis, working toward the lofty mission of building decent housing and renovating substandard dwellings "so that substandard housing and homelessness are eliminated for Maui and Lāna'i altogether," said Tornai. It's a daunting proposition, noted Tornai who recently heard people testifying at a meeting in Hāna
about 20-25 people living in four bedroom homes. "That is just unaeceptable," he said. "We're trying to make as mueh of a dent into that problem as we possibly ean." Maui doesn't have mueh affordable housing, making programs like Habitat critical, particularly in Hawaiian communities. "We've built a lot of homes on Hawaiian Homes land," said Tornai, who noted that homeowner education funded by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs helps more people to qualify. Last year, Habitat Maui eelebrated its 20th anniversary as an affiliate of Habitat for Humanity International. Since starting to build full homes in 2003, the nonprofit organization has built or renovated about 115 homes that provide affordable housing to more than 450 loeal residents, Tornai said. Tornai shared the story of a partner family that had been among the hidden homeless - staying with friends and family, not living on the street or in a car. The Habitat homeowner's son wanted to play Little League but he wasn't eligible to join a team without an address. By partnering with Habitat and putting in sweat equity, his mom was able to move them into their own home within a year. Her son was able to join a baseball team, whieh advanced to the Little League World Series championship. "Now it's looking like he might be able to get a college scholarship for baseball," said Tornai. "You don't know what stability in someone's housing situation will have in terms of the impact in their lives. It's amazing." Habitat's impact on Nakihei went mueh further than a home - and even included a job when a medical condition made it hard for her commute. Recently, Nakihei became general manager of the building she owns a condo in, whieh has 352 units and more than 1,000 residents. "I ean concentrate on treatment, spend time with my grandchildren in the swimming pool and I no need drive," she said. "My job is here, I ean walk out my backdoor and be at work." ■
Varna Nakihei wilh Hahilal Maui staff, board members and volunteers during her Home Blessing Ceremony. - Photos: Habitat for Humanity Maui
Habitat Homeowner Varna Nakihei works wilh Family Services Manager Sophie Lee during a personalized credit counseling and budgeting session.