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KANAHELE:I teach at Hawaii Community College. <br />M. ROY:As such, are you involved with this site in your teaching? <br />KANAHELE:Oh, yeah. And in all my classes, no, not all of them, mostly the <br />Hawaiian beliefs and practice class, which I actually talk about this practice, talk about <br />the practice thatÓs here. So I bring my class down every year to go through the two areas. <br />And their purpose is to go in there and re-map the place and see what has changed from <br />the last map that was presented by my class, see if anything is overgrown, or the <br />stonewalls are down, or people are actually living in the site. And so weÓve done that <br />with both places and every year I go back in it and check; but itÓs been -. For my class <br />members that go down, it has been an eye-opener for them. And u <br />places like that that has been in the public eye for a long time, this place has not been in <br />the public eye for a long time. And, so, theyÓre always pleasantly surprised by what they <br />find there and they feel like they have given back something, you know, just by going in <br />there and at that particular time taken some responsibility about trying to maintain <br />something thatÓs there; but we do that every year. <br />M. ROY:Would you say that the care and aloha for this place is also felt by <br />members of beyond your classes that you work with? <br />KANAHELE:Some of the members of the class continue to go back because they <br />have some sense of what the place is about and what the place should look like. And, so, <br />every once in awhile when I see them, they tell me that theyÓve gone back to look at the <br />place and they saw that somebody was living in the place and, so, they give me reports <br />like that. And, so, you know, in my small way IÓd like to expose more people to <br />Keolonhihi and Keakealawahine because that, to me, is a spot that, it goes back to <br />maybe one of the last times that we were, our culture was pure; and thatÓs what that <br />represents to me. <br />M. ROY:Do you prepare your students before they go with you? <br />KANAHELE:We get a lot of preparation for it, yeah. And, you kno <br />of my maps, we talk about the practice. First of all, we talk about some of David MaluÓs <br />things, we talk about the kumulipo and the practices within the kumulipo, about the <br />priestess lines that weÓre responsible for births and unions and keeping track of different <br />kinds of birth, whether itÓd be people or things of the ocean, things of the mountain, those <br />kind of things; and we talk about all of that. And then we come to this place and tell <br />them that this is where it actually happened here in HawaiÒi and, then, so they can make a <br />connection from the dim past to this place thatÓs going on in HawaiÒi, down to <br />Kamehameha that continued that particular practice Òcause heÓs, and then to <br />KamehamehaÓs children that were products of that particular practice, before inundation <br />of other cultures to HawaiÒi. <br />10 <br /> <br />