Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 20, Number 10, 1 October 2003 — HE AHA KOU MANAʻO? [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

HE AHA KOU MANAʻO?

What brought you to the justice march andfamily day?

To support, to find out what we are doing and where we are going. To see what is the consensus of the people. — Junior Kanuha, Kona

lt's overwhelming to see people eome together for one cause, to preserve and perpetuate the 'āina, because it's our lifeline. We need to mālama, we need to take care, so that we ean survive. We need to find a way to make it better, and to pass it on to the next generation. — Aunty Liko Lehua Hummel, Mānoa

_J One by one, everything is getting attacked. No matter what your persuasion, group or organization, it's a eommon threat, and people are starting to see that. We have to eome together and dispel these myths about racism — it's not about race, it's about justice. It should be easy for people to understand; I don't know why they have a hard time. — Kaeo Duarte, Kona

My wife works at Kamehameha Schools, so we eame to show unity with the rest of the Hawaiian people, to try and stop the lawsuits that are endangering the entitlements that Hawaiians rightly deserve. — Kalani Kaleikini, Waimānalo

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Photos: Derek Ferrar