To bring the entire Kanilehua Framework Webinar series and learning tools together, we created this interactive booklet with curated content from the seven webinar series. The interactive booklet allows users to access the the webinar recordings and key resource links including the HOI Evaluation Report 2021. The booklet also encourages users to reflect on their learning as they progress through the webinar series.
Use this interactive booklet to accompany your Hawaiʻi Train Learning Experience.
The artwork featured in the booklet are illustrated by Kealiʻimakamanaʻonalani Parker Poʻoloa.
The MĀPUNA LAB is a place of respite for those experiencing colonial trauma. Our work is naʻau centered and focused on health and healing. Guided by ʻōhiʻa lehua as our teacher, an endemic Hawaiian tree, we work in reciprocity and partnership in healing the chronic and existential pain of historical and intergenerational trauma with our Pacific Islander brothers and sisters.
Kākuhihewa is the 15th aliʻi ‘aimoku (ruling chief) of O‘ahu famously named in the mele “Kaulana Nā Pua.” Kākuhihewa was a kind and friendly chief who was born in Kūkaniloko and raised in the ‘Ewa moku. His primary endeavor was farming, and it is said that his abundant harvests on O‘ahu could be smelled from Kaua‘i.
Today, there is a state office building named after him in Kapolei.