Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 25, Number 6, 1 June 2008 — Making the connection through ancestry verification [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Making the connection through ancestry verification

Ho 'i hou i ka mole Return to the taproot. The return to love and loyaltyfor kith and kin after a severing ofrelationship. — 'Ōlelo No'eau By Nara Cardenas Special tū Ka Wai ūla Myrna Junk and Sianne Mataele, Ancestry Verification Assistants at the 0ffice of Hawaiian Affairs, share a dream for the Hawaiian Nation. "We need a genealogy center with all the infonnation in one plaee, where people could eome and be helped," says Sianne. Myrna adds, "If we have a eentral loeahon, then all Hawaiian Agencies ean eome to that plaee to verify ancestry. It would relieve

mueh of the confusion and frustration and the paperwork." It is a sentiment echoed in the Hawaiian community, where proving your Hawaiian pedigree is often a must in order to qualify for programs and services. 0HA's Ancestry Verification (AV) division often fields calls from frustrated beneficiaries who are intimidated by the process, whieh ean involve extensive research at various repositories. The staff is understanding. "When I started (doing research), I didn't want to do it," Sianne relates, "but onee I started doing my own, I fell in love with it. I thought there were no records, but then when I looked there were records, and as I got to know the process, I fell in love with it." Ten years later, verifying ancestry is her full-time job.

Myma emphasizes that AV is "very service oriented. I train my staff to direct callers to the appropriate agencies and the people who ean help them. At the end of the conversation, people are grateful." Ancestry Verification is a division of 0HA's Hawaiian Governance Hale. Staffed by two full-time employees and three part-time interns, AV verifies approximately 7,000 Kau Inoa registrations a month, a minimum of 400 per day. The division is also responsible for registering Hawaiians in 0HA's Hawaiian Registry Program, or HRP, initiated in May 2002 to create an updated infonnation base of Hawaiians. Registrants in HRP receive a photo ID card, whieh expires after five years in order to keep information current. AV issues an average of 200 HRP cards per month at OHA's Honolulu Office; the service is also available at OHA Offices on Kaua'i, Maui, Lāna'i, Moloka'i and Hawai'i Island. "It's niee to see how many people are responding," says Myrna. 'The greatest challenge we have is getting people to understand what we need, and how to get it to us. If your birth certificate doesn't say Hawaiian, you have to hnk it back to your biological Hawaiian ancestor," Myrna cautions. Of course, family is a great plaee to start. "Lfsually someone is taking charge, maybe someone at a family reunion,

for example. Auntie might have a copy of Grandma's birth certificate," Sianne advises. If you want to get into it, the Rev. Joe Hulu Mahoe Resource Center and 'Iolani Palaee hold classes to famiharize people with available resources and teach research techniques. Infonnation ean also be found at graveyards, cemeteries and churches. Some Hawaiians don't feel that they should have to prove ancestry. Myrna explains that "verification protects your identity for your ehildren and it protects the assets of Hawaiians. I encourage everybody to get their documents together as

far back as they ean trace them and keep them at home. We don't know what will be asked of us in the future." Genealogy research ean be a powerful means of healing for Hawaiians, many of whom have breaks in their lineage due to our turbulent history. The greatest reward Myrna and Sianne experienee is seeing the how excited people get when they find an ancestor and make the eonneetion. "It makes the person real for them," says Sianne. Myrna agrees. "Enjoy it! It's an adventure through your history." □

HO'OULU LĀHUI ALOHA ■ TD RAISE A BELDVED NAĪIŪN

Myrna Junk, Miehael Domingo and Mika Okamum of the OHA Hawaiian Registry hold a banner showing the Hawaiian Registry card featuring the photo illustration of Hawaiian Registry staffer Sianne Mataele. - Phoio: Blaine Fergerstrom