Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 39, Number 11, 1 November 2022 — An 'Ōiwi Filmmaker's Labor of Love [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Help Learn more about this Article Text

An 'Ōiwi Filmmaker's Labor of Love

By Ed McLaurin Atwo-hour documentary film by 'Ōiwi filmmaker Keoni Kealoha Alvarez is among the films that will be featured at the Hawai'i International Film Festival this month. The film, Kapu: Sacred Hawaiian Burials, documents Alvarez's personal journey of self-discovery after he learned in 2002 that a site in Puna on Hawai'i Island where iwi kūpuna were buried was being targeted for a housing project. At the time, Alvarez was a novice filmmaker. He had first learned about the remains as a young boy a decade earlier after his brothers discovered them in a hidden cave in the forest. With ancestral roots in Puna, Alvarez learned he could elaim the legal right to represent the iwi at the Hawai'i Island Burial Council in an effort to protect them, and the area, from development. His efforts paid off and the development project in Puna was eventually shut down. In the process, Alvarez has heeome a caretaker and protector of the iwi and, through an extraordinary series of events, was able to purchase four of the properties originally slated for development at a fraction of the price, while two other properties were gifted to him by the Williams family from California. He has cleared the land of invasive species and guards the area as a pu'uhonua (plaee of refuge). His journey has caused him to heeome deeply invested in the protection of Native Hawaiian burial sites, and in addition to producing Kapu: Sacred Hawaiian Burials, he has written three books on the topic. "One of the kupuna actually put me on this journey. At first it was to get to film about the subject, but then it heeame a passion project," said Alvarez. As part of his research he met with various kūpuna and government officials, searched archives at libraries and museums, and visited burial sites on several islands. Kapu: Sacred Hawaiian Burials premiered at the Maui Film Festival this past July. The project has been about advocacy as well as a journey of self-discovery for Alvarez. "I didn't know anything about my Hawaiian culture," he said. "I knew a little bit, but not in depth like what I know now." Alvarez noted that his purpose for creat-

ing the film was to bring awareness to Hawaiian burial traditions and their sacredness, as well as to stop the desecration of all Hawaiian burials in Hawai'i. "My mission is to honor and respect my ancestors' burials and burial grounds. Our Hawaiian race survived because of our kūpuna iwi legacy. We have to always remember our iwi kūpuna are our ancestors, they are the root of the Hawaiian existence...without our ancestors we have nothing." Alvarez is an independent filmmaker. He wrote, directed and produced Kapu: Sacred Hawaiian Burials. As part of the Hawai'i International Film Festival, the film will be shown virtually on Nov. 3 and at the Hilo Palaee Theatre on Nov. 20. ■

Keoni Alvarez - Photo: Courtesy