(Part I): Free My Husband’s Nation. Unleash Hawai’i.
Thanksgiving Day. Ironic, at the very least.
Within a few short days of writing my most recent, Ever Changing Page essay: “What Would You Do With Your Freedom?”–my husband, a Native Hawaiian spokesman for his indigenous people, is threatened with jail.
The Return Voyage, always and only moved by ancestral guidance, steps up a notch.
To all of you good folk who have attended Return Voyage gatherings during the past two years in Sarasota, Winona, Roanoke, Sedona, Santa Fe, Baton Rouge, Milwaukee, Farmington, Los Angeles, New York City, and so many towns and cities between: To each of you who asked, What can I do to help? To each of you to whom ‘Iokepa Hanalei ‘Imaikalani answered: “When you hear of the changes on the Hawaiian Islands, I ask that you offer a prayer for my people.”
Friends: We now ask that you step up a notch as well.
In the long, deep, ubiquitous story of freedom denied, of national identity obliterated, of oppression institutionalized: There have been wars waged, anger and violence righteously uncorked against oppressors.
But there has always been yet another way. The brave, singular acts of civil disobedience of Mahatma Gandhi, who ripped India’s freedom from the British stranglehold without fist or sword. Nelson Mandela, who freed his South African indigenous people with his hands and feet in chains. Martin Luther King staged sit-ins–those illegal acts of defiance–against the established laws of his land.
Each of these men men disobeyed unconscionable laws; each were imprisoned as a result. Their actions spoke for them: “I cannot recognize a law that enslaves my people”.
‘Iokepa Hanalei ‘Imaikalani honors their heroic example.
It has always seemed so small, the substance of the specific disobedience: A seat in a Woolworth luncheonette; a swim in the local pool. ‘Iokepa’s lapse from adherence to the law of the land appears no grander. The issue at hand is small; the significance of the freedom call is enormous.
For my husband, it is this. For thirteen years, he has refused to carry any identification that ties him to the United States. His Grandmothers instructed him: His sole identity must be Native Hawaiian–a descendant of a 13,000 year lineage that binds him to his aboriginal roots. His nation is Lahui–the authentic name of these Islands.
When you are Native Hawaiian and your Grandmothers (who died long before you were born) ask this of you, apparently you do not refuse.
Not refusing has meant this. ‘Iokepa does not carry any official American document: Driver’s license, car registration, car insurance, or social security number–each one of these concessions contingent on accepting the former one. For thirteen years he has not.
Don’t make this mistake: ‘Iokepa admires and supports the United States and yearns to see it live the fullness of its potential. But his Hawaiian blood and DNA makes its prior claim.
Two weeks ago, ‘Iokepa was driving his unregistered, uninsured, clean-as-a -whistle, 1998 Subaru station wagon on the streets of Kaua’i–without a government issued driver’s license. He was stopped (by the rare officer who didn’t know him), ticketed, and summoned to court.
On December 9, he will go, plead not guilty, and ask for a trial by jury. ‘Iokepa, though faced with fines he cannot pay and with jail he does not seek, calls this, “An opportunity to raise the consciousness and change the consensus.”
When my brother asked: “What if he loses?” I answered for both of us: “He cannot lose.”
And by that I do not mean that he will not be jailed. I do not mean that I want my husband shackled–or that my husband wants that for himself. We are not masochists. We very much prefer sleeping curled together. We savor our freedom.
But when I met ‘Iokepa 12 years ago, he warned me: “This is not about us.” And it is not. This is about a captive land, an oppressed people–and their freedom.
This small act of civil disobedience is a clarion call from a mountain-top to every one of us. Nobel Prize winning, author Toni Morrison once wrote: “The function of freedom is to free someone else.”
Friends, supporters: Let your imagination be your guide; please share this small act; retell this oldest of stories–the freedom of a people to live their own culture, to steward their own land, and to speak their own language to the ears of their Creator.
Let the Native Hawaiians teach the rest of us what is meant by Aloha.
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Restoring the sovereignty of Lahui, taken by U.S. military aggression, is the only just path. Respect for the indigenous people and their ways of knowing and being, without exploitation for personal economic gain is a crucial way to start.
Each time I come to the Islands I feel like I should show my passport (and even ask permission or be invited, like on Ni’ihau) and feel sorrow for the people whose home this has been for thousands of years before Europeans showed up.
Let us learn to not fail each other in standing up for basic human rights and healthy communities.
Lahui is a homeland, not a vacation/retirement “paradise”. Time to return what was stolen.
Justice and victory for ‘Iokepa!
Eric and Rachel:
We are deeply affected by your intelligent words, your heartfelt compassion, and your empowering support. Please continue to help us awaken awareness.
Ho’omaika’i–blessings, Inette and ‘Iokepa
Living in a day that peoples are returning to and embracing their native cultures on a global scale pose challenges for us all. The return of the Black Hills to the Sioux Nation, the honoring of existing treaties, the sovereignty of remote tribes, the preservation of a peoples fabric , are all epic ongoing struggles. I hear your voice amongst them
Gerry,
You are absolutely correct–this is global. It was so prophesied by the Hawaiian grandmothers. Thank you for hearing our “Voice amongst them.”
Inette and ‘Iokepa