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Through the Eyes of Ancestors

  • Posted on 4 Jul 2014
  • In Updates, Video Stories

By ʻOiwi TV

The kiʻi is an effigy of this generation taking hold of an ancient murmur.

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Bound tight to Hōkūleʻa’s two manu hope are wooden figures or ki’i symbolic of a long standing tradition among ancient Hawaiian canoe builders. On the starboard side is a male kiʻi “Kāne o Hōkūleʻa Ka Lani”, on the port side is a female kiʻi “Kiha Wahine Ka Moʻo o Malu Ulu o Lele” They are the creations of master carver Sam Ka’ai.

“Kiʻi means pictures. Photographs you take along, if you call upon ancestors you need to have some of them come along and bare witness. They are going to be in the other dimension. They are going to sail in the fluid place called the sea. Here is the place of Kāne and that is the place of Kanaloa. So kiʻi is an effigy of this generation taking hold of an ancient murmur,” said master carver Sam Kaʻai.

As the waʻa and its crew go out into the vast ocean, the kiʻi reminds them of the past and their journey to regain forgotten knowledge.

“The male is about people who lost their ways. So that kiʻi is a lost person. Notice heʻs blind, except in his ancient murmurs he remembers the true course. So all he does is trust, pray, reach and take hold of a star,” said Kaʻai.

Kaʻai acknowledges that though the kiʻi represents a lost man, Hōkūleʻaʻs voyages has proven that one can find their way through traditional navigation.

“We found our way. Us finding the way affirms that it can be done. We made the images, we blessed them, and we used them. It launched at Kualoa until they really stepped off to Tahiti, the female carving wasnʻt there. It showed up in the goodbye ceremony that I did. Thereʻs no tradition of a female carving on a canoe. Well why did you do that? Because they needed one from the other side of the veil to bare witness if we are courageous, if we are correct, if we are pono. I am a Piʻilani and in the lines of the Piʻilani who becomes very powerful in the late 15th century is Kihaapiʻilani a woman who is deified. I chose her because I have obedience to that bone, to that iwi. So I asked if I would put this as the witness.

“She bares witness if we are courageous, if we are nā koa, courageous, if we are brave if we are pono who watches man at his best or his worse and who will tell the story. Kiha, clear voice in the heaven so thatʻs where the female was chosen. She bares witness and will be the communicator if youʻre lost. Bares witness and says and this story is told,” said Kaʻai.

The kiʻi are also meant to provide guidance and protection for the waʻa and those aboard. These are essential as Hōkūleʻa makes its way on this long and momentous journey around the world.

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