Pu'ukohala - Huna Kalani Excursion
Puukohala Heiau is in South Kohala,
overlooking the Maui Straits. It was started in 1790 by Kamehameha I,
after the death of Captain Cook at Kealakekua Bay. A most
impressive place to visit, Puukohala has been partly restored
and is kapu (sacred) as it is still used for native Hawaiian rituals.
Pu'ukohala (hill of the whale) heiau
was built to help Chief Kamehameha shape the future of Hawaii. Kamehameha
built this luakini heiau (many graves - people were sacrificed
here) on the advice of kahuna Kapoukahi. The kahuna told Kamehameha that if he
built a temple dedicated to his family war god Ku-ka'ilimoku (Ku
taker of islands), then he, Kamehameha, could conquer and rule all the
Hawaiian islands as their first ali'i nui ... supreme chief of all Hawai'i.
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Puukohala Heiau
Painting by Herb Kane |
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When rival chiefs learned about the temple's construction,
they attacked Kamehameha, perhaps hoping to eliminate Kamehameha and his army, or
at least interfere with the rituals and displease the god Kukailimoku.
The chiefs sailed their armies to Kohala, where Kamehameha
defeated them, and completed building his war temple at Pu'ukohala.
When the heiau was completed, it measured 100 by 224 feet
(30 x 70 meters). Kapukahi's prophecy required that a high chief be
sacrificed there, so Kamehameha invited his cousin Chief Keoua
to the dedication. When Keoua arrived there was a fight in which Keoua and
most of his men were killed. The body of Chief Keoua was carried to the
heiau and offered as sacrifice to the war god Kukailimoku.
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Puukohala Heiau
Painting by Herb Kane |
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This sacrifice was observed by a British sailor, John
Young, who later became Kamehameha's military advisor. John
Young's house was built just below the Puukohala temple.
Chief Keoua's death was the end of opposition to Kamehameha
on the Big Island of Hawaii. By 1810, Kamehameha, through conquest and treaties,
became the first king of all Hawaii. King Kamehameha died in Kailua-Kona in
1819, and nobody knows the location of his grave.
The completion of Pu'ukohala in 1791 marked the
beginning of the end of old Hawaii. With the help of foreign guns,
cannon and ships, Kamehameha unified the islands under one king -
himself - in 1810. Kamehemeha's descendents would rule Hawaii for
just 83 years, until Hawaii was illegally annexed by the American
military in 1893. Pu'ukohala was designated as a national park in 1972.
HAWAIIAN NATIONAL
PARK LANGUAGE CORRECTION ACT 1999
Public Law 92-388
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of America in Congress
assembled, that in order to restore and preserve in public
ownership the historically significant temple associated with
Kamehameha the Great, who founded the historic Kingdom of
Hawaii, and the property of John Young who fought for Kamehameha
the Great during the period of his ascendancy to power, the
Secretary of the Interior is authorized to acquire, by donation
or purchase with donated funds, such lands and interests in
lands, together with structures and improvements thereon, not to
exceed one hundred acres, in the vicinity of Kawaihae, Hawaii,
as generally depicted on a map entitled `Boundary Map, [
Puukohola Heiau National Historic Site ] Pu'ukohola.AE8 Heiau
National Historic Site,' numbered NHS-PK 20,002, dated February
1970, which shall be off file and available for public
inspection in the offices of the National Park Service,
Washington, District of Columbia. The Secretary of the Interior
may from time to time revise the boundaries of the proposed
historic site, but the total acreage of the site shall not
exceed one hundred acres. |
Luakini Heiau & Human Sacrifice
Luakini heiau were usually the largest and most
elaborate Hawaiian temples. They were heiau of ruling chiefs,
dedicated to Ku as a patron of power, politics and war. Sacrifices
were offered at the luakini altar by the Mu (a sort-of police chief),
as old Hawaiians believed that god-spirits must be fed or
they would leave. When a chief or kahuna deemed that a human
sacrifice was needed, the Mu would seek victims.
The victim's rank was important. A chief or a warrior killed in battle was considered
a better sacrifice than a criminal or a slave. Sacrificial victims
were normally healthy men, who were often drowned to avoid disfiguring
their bodies. As a chief could order human sacrifice, a chief was
sometimes called a shark that travels on land, as Mary Pukui reported in
'Olelo No'eau: Hawaiian Proverbs, 1983.
Kamehameha
Kamehameha was born near the ancient
Mo'okini heiau, at Hawi in
North Kohala. As a young chief, Kamehameha was at Kealakekua Bay
during the Lono makahiki festival
when Captain Cook sailed into Hawaiian history, Hawaiian
godhood and a Hawaiian grave. And that's another story.
Hawaiian Spirituality . Aumakua .
Awaiku
King Kamehameha I conquered the islands and created
a unified kingdom of Hawaii, founded on the ancient kapu (taboo) system. However,
the arrival of foreigners, with their foreign diseases of the body, mind and
spirit would soon transform his beloved Hawaii into fruit farms and
tourist resorts.
Many of King Kamehameha's sacred places are now sites for
hotels and condominiums (e.g. the Kamehameha Hotel in Kailua-Kona), and the few
native Hawaiians still in Hawaii often appear to be disdained and treated poorly by their
ha'ole neighbors.
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King Kamehameha (Old Prints) |
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King Kamehameha defended the islands against invading
Russian forces in 1816 and 1817 - but he could not defend against Western
diseases. Hawaiians were an isolated people and vulnerable. Smallpox,
measles, leprosy, whooping cough, influenza and
gonorrhea devastated the native Hawaii population. By 1920, pure
Hawaiian people had diminished from over 500,000 to under 24,000.
Pronounce Kamehameha
with strong H sounds ... ka meamea means the "thingy"
The invading haole gained title to land and imported
foreign labor, mostly from China, Japan, the Philippines and Portugal.
In 1893, when the American military illegally overthrew the Hawaiian Monarchy, and
imprisoned Queen Liliuokalani, even the Hawaiian crown lands were
lost. Reaction against the illegal overthrow of Queen Liliuokalani and the
confiscation of crown lands by the American government form the moral basis for the popular
Hawaiian Sovereignty Movement.
Waipio Valley
. Pu'uhonua Honaunau
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