Eventful Hawaiian History Month in September
The third annual event will spotlight social justice and reconciliation of historical and cultural wrongs in Hawaiʻi.
The third annual event will spotlight social justice and reconciliation of historical and cultural wrongs in Hawaiʻi.
University of Hawaiʻi at 惭ā苍辞补 will host festivities to honor her majesty’s 184th lā hānau (birthday).
Nahenahe—Soft, sweet, melodious, as music or a gentle voice.
Edith Kanakaʻole is one of five American women to be minted on new quarters as part of the 2023 honorees for the American Women Quarters™ Program.
Welina—A greeting of affection, similar to aloha; a salutation in a letter.
About 100 Kapiʻolani Community College faculty and staff helped to usher in the fall 2022 semester and celebrate the naming of the campus’s Great Lawn.
Wehena—Opening, unfastening, taking off; solution, as of a problem.
Award-winning poet Noʻu Revilla casts a spotlight on themes of desire and intergenerational healing in Ask the Brindled.
Wela—Hot, burned; heat, temperature.
ʻIkena—Knowledge.