Quantcast

Honolulu Reporter

Friday, September 20, 2024

July 16, 2021: Congressional Record publishes “OCCASION OF CENTENNIAL OF THE HAWAIIAN HOMES COMMISSION ACT.....” in the Extensions of Remarks section

17edited

Ed Case was mentioned in OCCASION OF CENTENNIAL OF THE HAWAIIAN HOMES COMMISSION ACT..... on page E760 covering the 1st Session of the 117th Congress published on July 16, 2021 in the Congressional Record.

The publication is reproduced in full below:

OCCASION OF CENTENNIAL OF THE HAWAIIAN HOMES COMMISSION ACT

______

HON. ED CASE

of hawaii

in the house of representatives

Friday, July 16, 2021

Mr. CASE. Madam Speaker, last Friday, my colleague, Congressman Kaiali`i Kahele (Hawaii--Second), and I gathered here on Capitol Hill with leaders of our Native Hawaiian community and partners in the advancement of Native Hawaiians everywhere to recognize the centennial of the enactment, on July 9, 1921, of a truly revolutionary law, the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, to honor the times and memory of its author, Hawaii Delegate to Congress Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalani`anaole, and to reflect on and commit to the path still ahead.

That afternoon, we came together on the East grounds of the Capitol, directly outside the House chamber where Kuhio served for almost two decades, to share our mana'o (thoughts) on this momentous day. I would like to share here my own remarks on behalf of all throughout our Hawaii who I am privileged to represent:

To my colleague and friend, Congressman Kahele, our incredible guests that are here with us today, and our friends and `ohana watching everywhere, Aloha.

As I stand with you today, I have so many conflicting thoughts and emotions.

We are here on hallowed grounds that for centuries now have stood for the very best of humanity, and yet we are also on ground that at a bare minimum tolerated the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom.

We are on grounds that have advanced equality, opportunity, compassion and justice, and yet have sanctioned so much trial and tragedy for our indigenous peoples.

We are on grounds where just one year ago, we gathered to bid aloha to one of the great icons of the civil rights movement, my colleague John Lewis, and yet it is this very ground from which was launched an attack on our Capitol and democracy by our own fellow citizens.

This land is riddled with contradictions. As it was when Prince Kuhio came to Congress as the first Native Hawaiian to serve almost 120 years ago.

Kuhio spoke then of the urgency and despair of a people facing extinction in their own land. That was no idle concern. It had in fact happened to other indigenous peoples throughout our country and world; their peoples and cultures are simply no more.

There were then just perhaps 40,000 Native Hawaiians. The life expectancy of Native Hawaiians was but thirty years. They were increasingly not living on the land as had dozens of generations before them, but in the tenements of Honolulu in dire circumstances.

And yet, Kuhio entrusted his people to this still-new country, a country of promise but that had not shown it was deserving of that trust. And he devoted his next two decades toward advancing his people and to prove that his trust had not been misplaced.

As Congressman Kahele has said, the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, signed one hundred years ago today, was his singular accomplishment. But what was Prince Kuhio's legacy? What did it all add up to?

History is fickle. We're all judged by our successes and failures, our achievements and our shortcomings (of course always in hindsight and without the context of the times).

But I would make these three observations about Kuhio, looking back from the distance of history and as someone who is not Native Hawaiian.

First, he was exactly the right person for his time and place. Not just for Native Hawaiians, but for all of us whose ancestors and lifeblood lay then and now in Hawaii.

Second, the Kanaka Maoli did not, unlike many of their brothers and sisters, fade from this Earth. Native Hawaiians now number in the hundreds of thousands throughout our country and world, proudly reclaiming and perpetuating their history and culture and contributing alongside all others who seek a better path forward.

Third, Kuhio, as the first Native Hawaiian leader to step forward onto the national stage, exemplified what proud, principled and capable Hawaiian leadership is, setting the standard for so many of us who followed down the road he paved.

But history is never complete, and the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act is a perfect example. As one Kanaka Maoli leader noted recently, the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act was beautifully conceived but did not deliver in its implementation. In that the Act is its own story, and now we must turn the page toward better chapters.

Today, I follow and support Congressman Kahele in finding and forging that next chapter. For yesterday's achievements are just tomorrow's foundations, and yesterday's failures are just tomorrow's opportunities.

I am so deeply humbled with the responsibility--for all of us wherever we are for whom Hawaii is and always will be our true home--to partner with you in these next chapters of renewed opportunity and hope. Thank you. Mahalo.

____________________

SOURCE: Congressional Record Vol. 167, No. 125

The Congressional Record is a unique source of public documentation. It started in 1873, documenting nearly all the major and minor policies being discussed and debated.

House Representatives' salaries are historically higher than the median US income.

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS