Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Hawaii Super Moon Reveals Rare Endangered Native Pueo In Ewa

 Hawaii Super Moon Reveals Rare Endangered 

Native Pueo In Ewa

by John Bond   Kanehili Cultural Hui 

 

Videographer and owl enthusiast Tom Berg was able to capture on video, while rollerskating, a young adult Hawaiian Pueo owl on the very night of the September 27 super moon. 

 It has been many years since the last Hawaiian Pueo has been sighted anywhere in the Ewa area and this sighting is seen as an especially auspicious event. The Pueo is also regarded as the physical form assumed by ʻaumākua (ancestor spirits) in Hawaiian culture.


 Pueo is listed by the state of Hawaii as an endangered species on the island of Oahu.

This particular area where the young Pueo has now been seen has also been documented to be both within the Leina a ka uhane spirit leaping pathway as well as where the 1825 Malden Trail segment led to Kualaka'i village on the Ewa shoreline. 

This young pueo was photographed resting on a fence as the strong winds were making flying difficult. It has been able to adjust, so far, to the increasing noise of traffic and nearby rail construction, which makes daytime hunting very difficult.  

  

While numerous Barn owls have been seen in the area, Barns are night time hunters while Pueo's are mostly hunting in the early morning or late afternoon. Owls depend upon both keen sight and acute hearing to locate their prey.

The Barns and young Pueo are not directly competing for food (mice, rats), which have recently been abundant because of the recent rains. Late night hunting is advantageous to the Barn owl because it is much quieter and their rat and mouse prey are easily seen on the roads under street lights.

 Pueo once inhabited forests and grasslands throughout the islands of Hawaii but their numbers are declining, particularly in the last two decades, and especially on the island of Oahu. 


 

Unfortunately daytime hunting on Oahu for this increasingly rare and endangered young Pueo also means a greater chance of being hit by a car should it go after prey crossing the highway.

 The Pueo (Asio flammeus sandwichensis) is a subspecies of the short-eared owl that is endemic to Hawaii. In ancient times and during the Ewa plantation era Pueo's were fairly common. All of the massive construction and wiping out of once abundant foraging areas has increasingly reduced the Pueo's natural daytime foraging habitat. 

Ironically the nearby UH West Oahu, which has as its mascot the Pueo owl, now plans to destroy the lower campus area that has remained as an ideal Pueo foraging area. Nearby Department of Hawaiian Homelands is also blitzing Pueo habitat with new roads and concrete pads.

Planned East Kapolei and Hoopili HART Rail stations will forever destroy the Pueo's natural habitat and foraging areas. HART has pretended instead that concrete pillars with concrete Pueo cartoons is the ideal mitigation for wiping out this species on the Ewa Plain.





HONOLULU RAIL MEETS PUEO, 

CITY DENIES OWL EXISTS







FTA and HART Rail Misrepresent The True Ewa Honouliuli Native Hawaiian Spirit Pathway

Honouliuli Ewa TCP's Are Important Wahi Pana (Sacred Places) On Multi-Dimensional Levels








Photos Of West Oahu Community Opposition At City's Kapolei Important Agricultural Lands Meeting

Photos Of West Oahu Community Protests Of Hoopili Project Destroying 1500 Acres Of Prime Historic Ewa Farmland

Photos Of Protest Of Day Of Infamy City Bill 3 Which Destroys 1500 Acres Of Historic Prime Ewa Farmland 






SECRET Kalaeloa West Oahu Navy Land Transfer Violates Federal Law and Executive Orders








Photos Of West Oahu Community Protests Of Hoopili Project Destroying 1500 Acres Of Prime Historic Ewa Farmland

Photos Of Protest Of Day Of Infamy City Bill 3 Which Destroys 1500 Acres Of Historic Prime Ewa Farmland 

FTA HART Rail Farmland Dump Site Is Well Documented Native Hawaiian Burial Place 







Monday, July 27, 2015

Ewa Plain Major Hawaiian Burial Place - Federal TCP Documents

Under Former Ewa Plantation Lands, Hoopili, And 

HART Rail Stations

 Are Tens Of Thousands Of Iwi Kupuna Burials 

 

Kanehili Cultural Hui Report - John Bond 

 

The Leina a ka ‘uhane And Association With Major Native Burials In West Oahu


“Maly reflected that, given the history of the countryside, it would be more unusual not to find iwi than to find them”. June 23, 2011, Section 106 Programmatic Agreement (PA) Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP) Study Meeting

— William Aila, Hui Malama (before becoming DLNR Chair and now DHHL deputy.)
“People have estimated that there were 800,000 to a million people living here when Westerners arrived [in Hawaii in 1778]; some people estimate it was much higher—that’s one era,” says William Aila, a board member of Hui Malama. “You have many generations prior to that. A lot of people were born and died all over these Islands. They don’t just disappear.”

Figures from: IDENTIFICATION OF NATIVE HAWAIIAN TRADITIONAL CULTURAL PROPERTIES, Tuggles, Maly, etc., March 2001. (more documents further below)




IDENTIFICATION OF NATIVE HAWAIIAN TRADITIONAL CULTURAL PROPERTIES

by H. David Tuggle, Ph.D. M.J. Tomonari-Tuggle, M.A. with the collaboration of Maria E. Ka‘imipono Orr, Kepâ Maly Kumu Pono Associates, and Kalani Flores Mana ‘o‘i‘o Principal Investigator: Thomas S. Dye, Ph.D.
International Archaeological Research Institute, Inc.
Hawai‘i  March 2001

EXCERPTS:

“The main trail around O‘ahu passed through this populous area (‘I‘i 1869 [1959:96]). From the Waikîkî side, entering into ‘Ewa along the trail entailed crossing the leaping place of souls called Leilono, which was guarded by demons (see Kapûkakî, below). From the west, entering into ‘Ewa meant passing through the plain of Kaupe‘a, a place of wandering souls.”

Burials from the pre-contact and post-contact eras are known to occur over the entire ‘Ewa Plain, in sinkholes, platforms, and dune deposits (Tuggle and Tomonari-Tuggle 1997b). There is also a 19th century reference to chiefly burial that suggests there were places of interment for ali‘i at Pu‘uloa (Alexander 1906:27).

“The potential TCPs on Navy retained lands at former NAS Barbers Point include the plain of Kaupe‘a and the locale of Kualaka‘i. These places meet general NRHP criteria (see Section I.3.1). Connections can also be made among Kualaka‘i, the plain of Kaupe‘a, and Pu‘uokapolei, and their association with Kahiki(see Johnson 1988; Tuggle and Tomonari-Tuggle 1997b:27-29).

II.2.3.1. THE PLAIN OF KAUPE‘A 

The plain of Kaupe‘a was located on what is today called the ‘Ewa Plain. It probably includes the housing areas and the golf course in the Navy retained lands. Kaupe‘a (see Fig. 3 for location) has potential cultural significance under the following NRHP criteria:

(a) it is associated with traditional events and patterns of events, as expressed in its identification as the ao kuewa (place of homeless souls) for the island of O‘ahu; it is also identified as a place for the collection of plants used for a special lei.

(b) it is associated with the lives of persons significant in the past, as found in the traditions of Hi‘iaka.

It is associated with the lives of persons significant in the past, as found in the traditions of Hi‘iaka, has symbolic associations with Kahiki, ancestry, and the generations of ‘Ewa.

II.2.1.1. THE PLAIN OF KAUPE‘A AND KÂNEHILI

A place of many pits with human bones describes most of the great expanse of the ‘Ewa Plain, where limestone sinkholes were used for human interment over many centuries (including the post-contact period, see below). In many cases, human remains were placed on the floors of the sinkholes (not buried) with the bones thus visible when one looked into the pit, surely a setting to inspire association with spirits of the dead.

Each island had at least one place for wandering souls. For O‘ahu, this place was the plain of Kaupe‘a. Kamakau (1870 [1964:47], italics original) writes that Kaupe‘a was known as: …ao kuewa, the realm of homeless souls,…also called the ao ‘auwana, the realm of wandering souls. When a man who had no rightful place in the ‘aumakua realm died, his soul would wander about…

(The association of Leiolono with Kaupe‘a:)

According to Kamakau (1870 [1964:47-49]), the ao kuewa was one of the three places of the dead, the others being the realm of the ancestral spirits (ao ‘aumakua) and the realm of Milu, the place of endless night (pô pau ‘ole o Milu). Across the Pu‘uloa lagoon from Kaupe‘a was a place known as Leilono, which is located on the ridge dividing ‘Ewa and Kona districts (discussed below under Kapûkakî). It was at Leilono where the spirits of the dead leapt from the branches of a supernatural breadfruit tree, separating to go to one of the three realms. Those who had no help from ‘aumakua would end up friendless (po‘e ‘uhane hauka‘e), wandering the plain of Kaupe‘a catching moths and spiders.

Although the boundaries of the plain of Kaupe‘a are not clearly defined, it certainly occupied a substantial portion of the ‘Ewa Plain, including the area next to Pearl Harbor lagoon and the area of former NAS Barbers Point. Kamakau (1870 [1964:47-49]) describes the plain as “beside Pu‘uloa,” and as a place of wiliwili trees, which is a common tree on the dryland limestone of ‘Ewa. In the tradition of Pele and Hi‘iaka (Emerson 1915:167; Keonaona and S.L. Desha Sr. et al. 1927, in Maly Appendix B), the plain is described as extending from “the wiliwili trees…to Kanehili” (Ke Au Hou 1911, in Sterling and Summers 1978:44), and as back of Keahi and Pu‘uloa (Pukui 1943:59).

“At the same time, it is clear from Manu’s description quoted above, as well as many other references, that the plain of Kaupe‘a (and associated places of the ‘Ewa Plain) was much more than just a place of ghosts.”

“It is a place of stark beauty and great contrasts, captured in versions of the Pele and Hi‘iaka story” (Emerson 1915:166ff; Keonaona and Desha Sr. et al. 1927, in Maly Appendix B) and in the chant for Kûali‘I (Kapa‘ahulani, in Fornander 1916:390; 1919:458). Part of the beauty of Kaupe‘a is in the plants used to make a famous lei, as described in a song of Hi‘iaka “addressed to Lohiau and Wahine-oma‘o” (Emerson 1915:167.
 
It is possible that Kaupe‘a refers to the ‘Ewa Plain as a whole. This is suggested in a comparison of the repetition of place names and related features (primarily vegetation and springs) in the Pele and Hi‘iaka traditions, as well as in the chant for Kûali‘i (Kapa‘ahulani, in Fornander 1916:390; 1919:458). The following section from the tradition of Makanikeoe (Manu 1895, May 10, in Maly Appendix B) provides a substantial associative context for Kaupe‘a and the ‘Ewa Plain being synonymous:

Makanikeoe then departed from this place, turning to the plain of Puuloa. He passed many pits in this place where the bones of men have been left. He then followed the trail to the breadfruit tree, Leiwalu, at Honouliuli. This is the breadfruit tree of the expert sailor, Kahai, so told in his story:

There are also many pits in which were planted sugarcane and bananas, and planting mounds. He also saw manu oo (honey creepers) sipping the nectar of noni blossoms. There were also two ducks that had gone into a pit, and with a great strength, they were trying to push a stone over, to hide the pit. This Makanikeoe knew what the ducks were trying to do. They wanted to hide a spring of water which flowed underground there. It is this spring which in calm times could be heard, but not found by the people who passed through this area.

Parker and King (1990:9; emphasis added) elaborate on this by noting: Thus a property may be defined as a ‘site’ as long as it was the location of a significant event or activity, regardless of whether the event or activity left any evidence of its occurrence. A culturally significant natural landscape may be classified as a site, as may the specific location where significant traditional events, activities, or cultural observances have taken place…A concentration, linkage, or continuity of such sites or objects, or of structures comprising a culturally significant entity, may be classified as a district.

I.3.4.2.1. Place as Tangible Property

To qualify for the NRHP, a property must be a “tangible property—that is, a district, site, building, structure, or object” (Parker and King 1990:9). However, a tangible property does not have to be a constructed one, under the NR definition of “site” (from NR Bulletin 16, quoted in Parker and King 1990:9): …the location of a significant event, a prehistoric or historic occupation or activity, or a building or structure, whether standing, ruined, or vanished, where the location itself possesses historic, cultural, or archaeological value regardless of the value of any existing structure.

Parker and King (1990:9; emphasis added) elaborate on this by noting: Thus a property may be defined as a ‘site’ as long as it was the location of a significant event or activity,

regardless of whether the event or activity left any evidence of its occurrence. A culturally significant natural landscape may be classified as a site, as may the specific location where significant traditional events, activities, or cultural observances have taken place…A concentration, linkage, or continuity of such sites or objects, or of structures comprising a culturally significant entity, may be classified as a district.








 
Rail Lawsuit Requires Identification Of All Traditional Cultural Properties

FTA and HART Failed To Recognize 

Federal Judge Ruling On Rail Route TCP's


FTA and HART Rail Misrepresent The True Ewa Honouliuli Native Hawaiian Spirit Pathway

Honouliuli Ewa TCP's Are Important Wahi Pana (Sacred Places) On Multi-Dimensional Levels

Honouliuli Ewa's Makakilo Kalo'i Gulch - A Rare In Depth Survey Of This Important Cultural Property


West Oahu Leina A Ka Uhane Spirit Pathway Recognized By Federal Transit Administration



Kanehili Cultural Hui  
P.O. Box  75578   Kapolei, Hi.   96707

RE: HART Honolulu High Capacity Transit Corridor Project Section 106 Programmatic Agreement, Honolulu Hawaii July 16 Meeting 

Clarification of TCP issue the Leina a ka ‘uhane – spirit leap and pathway as per Stipulation IX Measures to Address Reasonably Foreseeable Direct, Indirect and Cumulative Effects Caused by the Project.

The Leina a ka ‘uhane has been determined to be National Register eligible under Stipulation II of the National Historic Preservation Act Section 106 Programmatic Agreement for the Project by the Federal Transit Administration.

Dear Mr. Rogers, Mr. Matley and Mr. Grabauskas:

In the July 16, 2015 meeting the FTA-HART deflection strategy for the Kanehili Cultural Hui (KCH) issue of the true pathway of the Leina, which FTA and HART could not refute based upon the documentation and evidence, was to have the SHPD representative state that the Leina TCP district could only be recognized as National Register eligible at the point of the leaping off place- Leiolono at Aliamanu.

It was also stated by FTA’s Ted Matley that “any recognition for the site was totally outside of the HART Programmatic Agreement.” Yet in fact FTA did recognize the “Leina District” in April 2012 in order to expedite commencement of rail construction.

For those who have asked why didn’t KCH and Mike Lee, recognized Ewa cultural practitioner and cultural descendant, raise these TCP issues earlier we have in fact done so for years and did so officially (with receipt documentation) to FTA, HART and SHPD in May 2013 before commencement of rail construction, after Federal Judge Tashima’s ruling that not ALL TCP’s were identified. ( See attached and below  )

KCH would like to point out the April 20, 2012 FTA Letter from Leslie Rogers to Dan Grabauskas, HART Re: Determination of No Historic Properties and authorization for commencement of construction, Honouliuli ahupuaa:

“Under Stipulation II of the National Historic Preservation Act Section 106 Programmatic Agreement for the Project, which was signed in January 2011 ("PA"), HART was required to conduct a phased evaluation of potential traditional cultural properties ("TCP") prior to the commencement of construction on each area evaluated.”

“Furthermore, FTA recognizes that portions of the Leina District are located within the Honouliuli ahupua'a. However, the pathway of the Leina District does not cross the APE of the Project within the Honouliuli ahupua' a. The Leina District does cross the APE of the Project further along the guideway of the Project outside the Honouliuli ahupua'a. The Leina District will be further evaluated in subsequent geographic subdivisions where it crosses the guideway of the Project.”  Leslie T. Rogers Regional Administrator, FTA   April 20, 2012
It should also be pointed out that in the FTA-HART Programmatic Agreement meetings that HART will prepare National Register of Historic Places forms for identified TCP’s.

Kanehili Cultural Hui’s TCP presentation on Thursday, July 16, 2015 at the FTA-HART Programmatic Agreement meeting centered on the fact that the Leina a ka ‘uhane spirit pathway was misrepresented by the HART TCP contractor SRIF in order to provide FTA and HART the “management decision” ( stated in a previous internal HART document, see further below ) they needed to formally declare that the Leina was not in the APE of the project in order to immediately proceed with rail construction.

Kanehili Cultural Hui’s TCP presentation showed that the Leina pathway can be correctly determined and identified using a program called SunCalc which shows that the spirit pathway is not “intangible” and can in scientific fact be determined EXACTLY by the annual solar cycle sunset which clearly goes over the entire West Oahu Farrington Highway (WOFH) rail segment APE of four stations, including the East Kapolei station in January, and including the West Loch station in Waipahu in July.

After the ruling of federal judge Wallace Tashima that not all TCP’s along the entire rail route had been identified Mike Lee and Kanehili Cultural Hui officially submitted an extensive package of full TCP comments, including the Leina, in the form of maps, surveys, reports, studies, references and supporting Hawaiian cultural documents to FTA, HART and SHPD on May 30, 2013 as officially recognized Section 106 Programmatic Agreement consulting parties. 

Complete hard copies were delivered to SHPD with date/time stamp and additional email confirmation from SHPD. FTA and HART received certified DVD copies as well as other parties including the NTHP and NPS.

Kanehili Cultural Hui also provides further well referenced documentation (see below) previously submitted in May 2013, which clearly shows Kaupe’a as the ancient name for the Ewa Plain, a direct cultural connection with the Leina a ka ‘uhane and Kaupe’a as a well documented place of mass iwi burials over centuries of native Hawaiian residence.


Hawaiian cultural researcher Kepā Maly says: “The Leina a ka uhane is worthy of a district nomination because there are connections from the leaping place, He ulu o Leiwalo, on the Moanalua side to the general region on the Honouliuli plain. This was the leaping place – from which the ‘uhane lept and settled in the plains of Honouliuli.”

The Department of Hawaiian Homelands residential projects on this same Ewa Plain are named, not by coincidence, Kaupe’a and Kanehili.

Since the federally funded FTA and HART Rail project were the actual “trigger” to spend federal funds to extensively document the Leina TCP district and other important storied places (wahi pana) why is it then being misrepresented for what and where it truly is?

Kepa Maly (KPA) raised the issue of what happens to the spirit of the dead in his interview with Kupuna Arline Eaton. He asked Ms. Eaton if she was aware of the “…connection between Leilono at Aliamanu and Kapukaki, all the way to Honouliuli, the leaping place of the spirits.” Ms. Eaton acknowledged the leaping off place as a place of spirits associated with Kaupe‘a and Kanehili (Interview with Arline Eaton, August 23, 2011, Maly and Maly 2011 b:740).

In the determination of National Register eligibility in the 2012 FTA, HART, SHPO letters and extensive reports they reference Kaupe’a and Kanehili, well documented places on the Ewa Plain (Milu is a spirit purgatory.) This was how the HART TCP consultant SRIF was able to show in the spirit pathway map that it was outside of the HART Rail Area of Potential Effect (APE) by using a USGS map as reference.


The HART Leina as defined in their own map is NOT intangible but determined by the annual solar cycle. Only a small green section was shown in order to expedite rail construction. The red arrows show the true width of the January to July Leina pathway.

How can FTA and HART have it both ways? The time, money and research to discuss and thoroughly document the Leina and then misrepresent it? Why wasn’t the true Leina pathway simply recognized? Did FTA and HART really believe rail construction could not commence if the true Leina a ka ‘uhane district was known? This is the most curious part of the fraudulent FTA HART “management decision.”


Above, a straight due west leap towards the sunset from Leiolono 
crosses the rail APE

HART stated in the July 16 TCP meeting that the spirit pathway is “intangible” with no property references. However, Kanehili Cultural Hui pointed out that the pathway is determined by the sunset where native souls guided by their amakua use it as a portal back to the Kaviki homeland and is clearly, and scientifically, marked by the position of the Western sunset. (As shown below sunset positions had major cultural importance.)

The Kaupe’a, Kanehili Puuloa (Ewa Plain - Pearl Harbor) cultural relationship

The leeward (generally southwestern) side of an island is considered the “front” for navigational purposes. The western sunset is the portal for the spirit to return home.

And in fact, Hawaiian cultural descendant Michael Kumukauoha Lee has pointed out that the January 8, Western sunset reference used in the Kanehili Hui PowerPoint is where his royal relative was secretly buried, later discovered ( head at west, feet at   east ) and then subsequently reinterned nearby at a secret location on Ewa Hoakalei Foundation land. (Identified as the remains of Kaomileika’ahumanu, the true birth Mother of Kauikeaouli, Kamehameha the III.)

Michael Lee has previously stated that other well known aliʻi have been also buried at Oneʻula, and include, but are not limited to, Kaʻeokūlani, Kalanikūpule, Kualiʻi, Peleʻioholani, Kealiʻiahonui, and those associated with the Oʻahu line of ruling chiefs as well as Maui and Kauaʻi. 

The importance of WEST and the solar cycle to the culture of the Ewa Plain

Michael Lee also states that the Kupuna caves of shark goddess Ka'ahupahau in Ewa, where there is a large bronze statue in her honor and memory, are also all in this same exact Westerly alignment of the setting sun- which is in the Leina spirit portal direction.

The annual and well attended Oahu solstice event is held every year at the Waikiki Aquarium on May 1 when the sun sets at an exact point at Puu-o-Kapolei, a key Ewa Plain (Kaupe’a, Kanehili, chants of Hi’iaka, etc.) reference point. “The Hawaiian calendar is not based on dates but celestial events. The leaving of the Ho’oilo season and the coming of the Makali'i has been identified as our summer solstice although the date is not consistent with our western solstice,” – Shad Kane

... The people of O`ahu reckoned from the time when the sun set over Pu`u o Kapolei until it set in the hollow of Mahimaomao and called this period Kau, and when it moved south again from Pu`u o Kapolei and it grew cold and the time when young sprouts started, the season was called from their germination (oilo) the season Ho`oilo. There were therefore two seasons, the season of Makali`i and the season of Ho`olio." (S.M. Kamakau, Mo`olelo Hawai`i, Vol. 1, Chpt.2, p. 23.)

Kanehili Cultural Hui’s July 16, 2015 TCP presentation made it clear where the true and correct Leina pathway is. Thousands of homes have already been built on the Ewa Plain- and, spirit encounters, “hauntings” and Night Marchers have been widely reported for many decades during the Ewa Plantation era and in modern times in Ewa Plain schools, offices and homes. The reason is because the Kaupe’a lands they live on are the burial sites of the Leina a ka ‘uhane.

Kanehili PowerPoint- view the following shared folder:

 “It’s possible that every source has not been found and identified. However, I can say the locations are accurate based on knowledge that is far greater – from kūpuna, born and raised and buried in the land – who described the settings of Pu‘u o Kapolei, Kaupe‘a, Kānehili and Kualakai,” – Kepa Maly HART TCP project researcher.

In Conclusion

There is no denying that FTA recognized the Leina a ka ‘uhane “Leina District” as a National Historic Preservation Act Traditional Cultural Property under stipulation II of the Section 106 Programmatic Agreement for the Project, in an April 2012 letter from FTA director Leslie Rogers to HART executive director Dan Grabauskas.

HART Programmatic Agreement meetings showed slides stating that if TCP’s are identified as NRHP eligible that HART will prepare NRHP nomination forms.

The Leina pathway is a tangible boundary defined by the solar cycle and Kaupe’a and Kanehili are tangible and well documented real places associated with the Leina where iwi was buried and native souls resided awaiting assistance from their amakua to complete their journey west to their homeland. Those that didn’t remained in Kaupe’a.

National Registering the Leina a ka ‘uhane and officially recognizing its importance as a Traditional Cultural Property native Hawaiian religious concept should be the HART rail educational mitigation for the residents of the Ewa Plain. Concrete columns, cartoon coloring books, etc. are not acceptable. HART should keep a promise for Ewa people. 

Below is further well referenced documentation on the Leina and Kaupe’a. The Navy Tuggles research showed Kaupe’a as NRHP eligible under categories A, B and D.
This is about correcting the intentional fraudulent misrepresentation of the Leina district in order to rush rail construction. FTA and HART should show some honesty and justice and correct this by placing the Leina a ka uhane on the National Register as promised.

Aloha,

John Bond, President
Kanehili Cultural Hui

The Leina a ka ‘uhane and association with physical properties in West Oahu

“Maly reflected that, given the history of the countryside, it would be more unusual not to find iwi than to find them”. June 23, 2011, Section 106 Programmatic Agreement (PA) Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP) Study Meeting

— William Aila, Hui Malama (before becoming DLNR Chair and now DHHL deputy.)
“People have estimated that there were 800,000 to a million people living here when Westerners arrived [in Hawaii in 1778]; some people estimate it was much higher—that’s one era,” says William Aila, a board member of Hui Malama. “You have many generations prior to that. A lot of people were born and died all over these Islands. They don’t just disappear.”

Figures from: IDENTIFICATION OF NATIVE HAWAIIAN TRADITIONAL CULTURAL PROPERTIES, Tuggles, Maly, etc., March 2001. (more documents further below)




IDENTIFICATION OF NATIVE HAWAIIAN TRADITIONAL CULTURAL PROPERTIES

by H. David Tuggle, Ph.D. M.J. Tomonari-Tuggle, M.A. with the collaboration of Maria E. Ka‘imipono Orr, Kepâ Maly Kumu Pono Associates, and Kalani Flores Mana ‘o‘i‘o Principal Investigator: Thomas S. Dye, Ph.D.
International Archaeological Research Institute, Inc.
Hawai‘i  March 2001

EXCERPTS:

“The main trail around O‘ahu passed through this populous area (‘I‘i 1869 [1959:96]). From the Waikîkî side, entering into ‘Ewa along the trail entailed crossing the leaping place of souls called Leilono, which was guarded by demons (see Kapûkakî, below). From the west, entering into ‘Ewa meant passing through the plain of Kaupe‘a, a place of wandering souls.”

Burials from the pre-contact and post-contact eras are known to occur over the entire ‘Ewa Plain, in sinkholes, platforms, and dune deposits (Tuggle and Tomonari-Tuggle 1997b). There is also a 19th century reference to chiefly burial that suggests there were places of interment for ali‘i at Pu‘uloa (Alexander 1906:27).

“The potential TCPs on Navy retained lands at former NAS Barbers Point include the plain of Kaupe‘a and the locale of Kualaka‘i. These places meet general NRHP criteria (see Section I.3.1). Connections can also be made among Kualaka‘i, the plain of Kaupe‘a, and Pu‘uokapolei, and their association with Kahiki(see Johnson 1988; Tuggle and Tomonari-Tuggle 1997b:27-29).

II.2.3.1. THE PLAIN OF KAUPE‘A 

The plain of Kaupe‘a was located on what is today called the ‘Ewa Plain. It probably includes the housing areas and the golf course in the Navy retained lands. Kaupe‘a (see Fig. 3 for location) has potential cultural significance under the following NRHP criteria:

(a) it is associated with traditional events and patterns of events, as expressed in its identification as the ao kuewa (place of homeless souls) for the island of O‘ahu; it is also identified as a place for the collection of plants used for a special lei.

(b) it is associated with the lives of persons significant in the past, as found in the traditions of Hi‘iaka.

It is associated with the lives of persons significant in the past, as found in the traditions of Hi‘iaka, has symbolic associations with Kahiki, ancestry, and the generations of ‘Ewa.

II.2.1.1. THE PLAIN OF KAUPE‘A AND KÂNEHILI

A place of many pits with human bones describes most of the great expanse of the ‘Ewa Plain, where limestone sinkholes were used for human interment over many centuries (including the post-contact period, see below). In many cases, human remains were placed on the floors of the sinkholes (not buried) with the bones thus visible when one looked into the pit, surely a setting to inspire association with spirits of the dead.

Each island had at least one place for wandering souls. For O‘ahu, this place was the plain of Kaupe‘a. Kamakau (1870 [1964:47], italics original) writes that Kaupe‘a was known as: …ao kuewa, the realm of homeless souls,…also called the ao ‘auwana, the realm of wandering souls. When a man who had no rightful place in the ‘aumakua realm died, his soul would wander about…

(The association of Leiolono with Kaupe‘a:)

According to Kamakau (1870 [1964:47-49]), the ao kuewa was one of the three places of the dead, the others being the realm of the ancestral spirits (ao ‘aumakua) and the realm of Milu, the place of endless night (pô pau ‘ole o Milu). Across the Pu‘uloa lagoon from Kaupe‘a was a place known as Leilono, which is located on the ridge dividing ‘Ewa and Kona districts (discussed below under Kapûkakî). It was at Leilono where the spirits of the dead leapt from the branches of a supernatural breadfruit tree, separating to go to one of the three realms. Those who had no help from ‘aumakua would end up friendless (po‘e ‘uhane hauka‘e), wandering the plain of Kaupe‘a catching moths and spiders.

Although the boundaries of the plain of Kaupe‘a are not clearly defined, it certainly occupied a substantial portion of the ‘Ewa Plain, including the area next to Pearl Harbor lagoon and the area of former NAS Barbers Point. Kamakau (1870 [1964:47-49]) describes the plain as “beside Pu‘uloa,” and as a place of wiliwili trees, which is a common tree on the dryland limestone of ‘Ewa. In the tradition of Pele and Hi‘iaka (Emerson 1915:167; Keonaona and S.L. Desha Sr. et al. 1927, in Maly Appendix B), the plain is described as extending from “the wiliwili trees…to Kanehili” (Ke Au Hou 1911, in Sterling and Summers 1978:44), and as back of Keahi and Pu‘uloa (Pukui 1943:59).

“At the same time, it is clear from Manu’s description quoted above, as well as many other references, that the plain of Kaupe‘a (and associated places of the ‘Ewa Plain) was much more than just a place of ghosts.”

“It is a place of stark beauty and great contrasts, captured in versions of the Pele and Hi‘iaka story” (Emerson 1915:166ff; Keonaona and Desha Sr. et al. 1927, in Maly Appendix B) and in the chant for Kûali‘I (Kapa‘ahulani, in Fornander 1916:390; 1919:458). Part of the beauty of Kaupe‘a is in the plants used to make a famous lei, as described in a song of Hi‘iaka “addressed to Lohiau and Wahine-oma‘o” (Emerson 1915:167.
 
It is possible that Kaupe‘a refers to the ‘Ewa Plain as a whole. This is suggested in a comparison of the repetition of place names and related features (primarily vegetation and springs) in the Pele and Hi‘iaka traditions, as well as in the chant for Kûali‘i (Kapa‘ahulani, in Fornander 1916:390; 1919:458). The following section from the tradition of Makanikeoe (Manu 1895, May 10, in Maly Appendix B) provides a substantial associative context for Kaupe‘a and the ‘Ewa Plain being synonymous:

Makanikeoe then departed from this place, turning to the plain of Puuloa. He passed many pits in this place where the bones of men have been left. He then followed the trail to the breadfruit tree, Leiwalu, at Honouliuli. This is the breadfruit tree of the expert sailor, Kahai, so told in his story:

There are also many pits in which were planted sugarcane and bananas, and planting mounds. He also saw manu oo (honey creepers) sipping the nectar of noni blossoms. There were also two ducks that had gone into a pit, and with a great strength, they were trying to push a stone over, to hide the pit. This Makanikeoe knew what the ducks were trying to do. They wanted to hide a spring of water which flowed underground there. It is this spring which in calm times could be heard, but not found by the people who passed through this area.

Parker and King (1990:9; emphasis added) elaborate on this by noting: Thus a property may be defined as a ‘site’ as long as it was the location of a significant event or activity, regardless of whether the event or activity left any evidence of its occurrence. A culturally significant natural landscape may be classified as a site, as may the specific location where significant traditional events, activities, or cultural observances have taken place…A concentration, linkage, or continuity of such sites or objects, or of structures comprising a culturally significant entity, may be classified as a district.

I.3.4.2.1. Place as Tangible Property

To qualify for the NRHP, a property must be a “tangible property—that is, a district, site, building, structure, or object” (Parker and King 1990:9). However, a tangible property does not have to be a constructed one, under the NR definition of “site” (from NR Bulletin 16, quoted in Parker and King 1990:9): …the location of a significant event, a prehistoric or historic occupation or activity, or a building or structure, whether standing, ruined, or vanished, where the location itself possesses historic, cultural, or archaeological value regardless of the value of any existing structure.

Parker and King (1990:9; emphasis added) elaborate on this by noting: Thus a property may be defined as a ‘site’ as long as it was the location of a significant event or activity,

regardless of whether the event or activity left any evidence of its occurrence. A culturally significant natural landscape may be classified as a site, as may the specific location where significant traditional events, activities, or cultural observances have taken place…A concentration, linkage, or continuity of such sites or objects, or of structures comprising a culturally significant entity, may be classified as a district.

Rail Lawsuit Requires Identification Of All Traditional Cultural Properties


HART Consultant SRIF will make recommendations to the City 
regarding whether or not there are TCPs

Page iv DOEFOE for Previously Unidentified Traditional Cultural Properties-Sec 1-3


“SRIF will make recommendations to the City regarding whether or not there are TCPs in or near the APE that are National Register-eligible that may be affected by the Project. SRIF’s role is to see the right people are consulted, and the regulations followed so that the City, and the Federal Transit Administration can make management decisions. He noted that since he and Martha Graham of SRIF are not Hawaiians, KPA will do the actual TCP research for the Project.”  May 25, 2012
 





FTA and HART Failed To Recognize 

Federal Judge Ruling On Rail Route TCP's


FTA and HART Rail Misrepresent The True Ewa Honouliuli Native Hawaiian Spirit Pathway

Honouliuli Ewa TCP's Are Important Wahi Pana (Sacred Places) On Multi-Dimensional Levels

Honouliuli Ewa's Makakilo Kalo'i Gulch - A Rare In Depth Survey Of This Important Cultural Property