Home Actress Hāwane Rios HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers February 2024 Hāwane Rios Instagram - ‘Kū Kia’i Palesetina // Solidarity March for Peace // January 28, 2024 in Honolulu, Hawai’i’ Honored to have laid down footsteps and offerings of chant and song to call for a permanent ceasefire and absolute end to the genocide of Palestine, Congo, Sudan, West Papua and all places and people suffering the devastation and soul shattering anguish of the evil powers that be. I have marched adorned in my regalia, in my sacred ‘a‘ahu since the first march we were asked to offer protocol for in 2012 for the ‘A‘ole GMO Movement in Hilo Hanakahi. It was so powerful to ‘a‘ahu in regalia alongside people that I have been in ceremony with for the past three years. We adorned in pā‘ū, kākua, lei hulu, lei momi, lei aloha from every sacred moment in prayer we have shared together in the places with stand for. When we ‘a‘ahu and when we oli, we are bringing the best of ourselves and the highest of our offerings to the place and the people we are standing up in solidarity for. I looked around and saw the words Kū Kia‘i Palesetina everywhere my eyes landed and all I could think of was how incredibly powerful it is to affirm our love for a place most of us have never been in our language and in the language of our movement for Mauna Kea which brought us into relationship on the Ala Hulu Kūpuna. So when we chant and when we include the God of the people we stand with in our prayers, it is our highest, most sacred of ceremonial expressions of devotion. I don’t just stand for Palestine. I have come to deeply love Palestine. And that is why I promise to keep speaking, keep marching, and keep posting as much as I possibly can. Because it is, to me, the correct thing to do. It is the kūpono thing to do. It is the kūpono person to be and continue to become. Aloha nā waipuna me nā ki’owai o Paleketina Mai nā kahawai a hiki loa i ka Moananuiākea E mau ke ea o ka ‘āina i ka pono I ke aloha i ka ‘oia’i’o Kū nā Kia’i Mauna a Wākea Kū nā kia’i Paleketina Inshallah Ameen From the river to the sea Palestine and Hawai’i shall be free 📸: @jenmay Puu Huluhulu

Hāwane Rios Instagram – ‘Kū Kia’i Palesetina // Solidarity March for Peace // January 28, 2024 in Honolulu, Hawai’i’ Honored to have laid down footsteps and offerings of chant and song to call for a permanent ceasefire and absolute end to the genocide of Palestine, Congo, Sudan, West Papua and all places and people suffering the devastation and soul shattering anguish of the evil powers that be. I have marched adorned in my regalia, in my sacred ‘a‘ahu since the first march we were asked to offer protocol for in 2012 for the ‘A‘ole GMO Movement in Hilo Hanakahi. It was so powerful to ‘a‘ahu in regalia alongside people that I have been in ceremony with for the past three years. We adorned in pā‘ū, kākua, lei hulu, lei momi, lei aloha from every sacred moment in prayer we have shared together in the places with stand for. When we ‘a‘ahu and when we oli, we are bringing the best of ourselves and the highest of our offerings to the place and the people we are standing up in solidarity for. I looked around and saw the words Kū Kia‘i Palesetina everywhere my eyes landed and all I could think of was how incredibly powerful it is to affirm our love for a place most of us have never been in our language and in the language of our movement for Mauna Kea which brought us into relationship on the Ala Hulu Kūpuna. So when we chant and when we include the God of the people we stand with in our prayers, it is our highest, most sacred of ceremonial expressions of devotion. I don’t just stand for Palestine. I have come to deeply love Palestine. And that is why I promise to keep speaking, keep marching, and keep posting as much as I possibly can. Because it is, to me, the correct thing to do. It is the kūpono thing to do. It is the kūpono person to be and continue to become. Aloha nā waipuna me nā ki’owai o Paleketina Mai nā kahawai a hiki loa i ka Moananuiākea E mau ke ea o ka ‘āina i ka pono I ke aloha i ka ‘oia’i’o Kū nā Kia’i Mauna a Wākea Kū nā kia’i Paleketina Inshallah Ameen From the river to the sea Palestine and Hawai’i shall be free 📸: @jenmay Puu Huluhulu

Hāwane Rios Instagram - ‘Kū Kia’i Palesetina // Solidarity March for Peace // January 28, 2024 in Honolulu, Hawai’i’ Honored to have laid down footsteps and offerings of chant and song to call for a permanent ceasefire and absolute end to the genocide of Palestine, Congo, Sudan, West Papua and all places and people suffering the devastation and soul shattering anguish of the evil powers that be. I have marched adorned in my regalia, in my sacred ‘a‘ahu since the first march we were asked to offer protocol for in 2012 for the ‘A‘ole GMO Movement in Hilo Hanakahi. It was so powerful to ‘a‘ahu in regalia alongside people that I have been in ceremony with for the past three years. We adorned in pā‘ū, kākua, lei hulu, lei momi, lei aloha from every sacred moment in prayer we have shared together in the places with stand for. When we ‘a‘ahu and when we oli, we are bringing the best of ourselves and the highest of our offerings to the place and the people we are standing up in solidarity for. I looked around and saw the words Kū Kia‘i Palesetina everywhere my eyes landed and all I could think of was how incredibly powerful it is to affirm our love for a place most of us have never been in our language and in the language of our movement for Mauna Kea which brought us into relationship on the Ala Hulu Kūpuna. So when we chant and when we include the God of the people we stand with in our prayers, it is our highest, most sacred of ceremonial expressions of devotion. I don’t just stand for Palestine. I have come to deeply love Palestine. And that is why I promise to keep speaking, keep marching, and keep posting as much as I possibly can. Because it is, to me, the correct thing to do. It is the kūpono thing to do. It is the kūpono person to be and continue to become. Aloha nā waipuna me nā ki’owai o Paleketina Mai nā kahawai a hiki loa i ka Moananuiākea E mau ke ea o ka ‘āina i ka pono I ke aloha i ka ‘oia’i’o Kū nā Kia’i Mauna a Wākea Kū nā kia’i Paleketina Inshallah Ameen From the river to the sea Palestine and Hawai’i shall be free 📸: @jenmay Puu Huluhulu

Hāwane Rios Instagram – ‘Kū Kia’i Palesetina // Solidarity March for Peace // January 28, 2024 in Honolulu, Hawai’i’

Honored to have laid down footsteps and offerings of chant and song to call for a permanent ceasefire and absolute end to the genocide of Palestine, Congo, Sudan, West Papua and all places and people suffering the devastation and soul shattering anguish of the evil powers that be.

I have marched adorned in my regalia, in my sacred ‘a‘ahu since the first march we were asked to offer protocol for in 2012 for the ‘A‘ole GMO Movement in Hilo Hanakahi. It was so powerful to ‘a‘ahu in regalia alongside people that I have been in ceremony with for the past three years. We adorned in pā‘ū, kākua, lei hulu, lei momi, lei aloha from every sacred moment in prayer we have shared together in the places with stand for. When we ‘a‘ahu and when we oli, we are bringing the best of ourselves and the highest of our offerings to the place and the people we are standing up in solidarity for.

I looked around and saw the words Kū Kia‘i Palesetina everywhere my eyes landed and all I could think of was how incredibly powerful it is to affirm our love for a place most of us have never been in our language and in the language of our movement for Mauna Kea which brought us into relationship on the Ala Hulu Kūpuna.

So when we chant and when we include the God of the people we stand with in our prayers, it is our highest, most sacred of ceremonial expressions of devotion. I don’t just stand for Palestine. I have come to deeply love Palestine.

And that is why I promise to keep speaking, keep marching, and keep posting as much as I possibly can. Because it is, to me, the correct thing to do. It is the kūpono thing to do. It is the kūpono person to be and continue to become.

Aloha nā waipuna me nā ki’owai o Paleketina
Mai nā kahawai a hiki loa i ka Moananuiākea
E mau ke ea o ka ‘āina i ka pono
I ke aloha i ka ‘oia’i’o
Kū nā Kia’i Mauna a Wākea
Kū nā kia’i Paleketina
Inshallah
Ameen

From the river to the sea
Palestine and Hawai’i shall be free

📸: @jenmay Puu Huluhulu | Posted on 30/Jan/2024 08:49:49

Hāwane Rios Instagram – Ku‘u Mau Kūpuna Aloha
Ku‘u Mau Kūpuna ‘Ōlelo Hawai’i
My beloved grandmothers of love 
My beloved keepers of ‘ōlelo Hawai’i 

Ku‘u Kupuna Wahine Kuakahi
Mabel Ke‘alalaua‘e Hussey 

Ku‘u Kupuna Wahine Kualua 
Emma Pa‘a 

Ku‘u Kupuna Wahine Kuakolu
Kapena Lualoa

These are the powerful Kānaka Maoli women I descend from of the lands of Kohala. From womb, to womb, to womb, to womb, to me.

They live on in my beating heart, in my bones, in my skin, in my songs. Offerings of salt go to the land today in their honor, for their guidance, and for their eternal love. I never got to meet them but I know them in my soul. I know they prayed for me. I know they wished me a good life. I know their love is in and around me everyday. 

I call upon my kūpuna by name because when we call, they come, and this I know for certain. When my body is tired and my heart is weary of this world, they come and tell me that their strength is my strength. They tell me that we come from ‘Āpa‘apa‘a winds and no matter how hard that wind blows, we are the ‘a‘ali‘i, rooted so deep into the land that we cannot be toppled over. 

They lived through the illegal annexation of our home to the United States. They lived through the ban of our language and cultural practices. They lived through the wars. They lived through the heartbreak of constant oppression. They lived through the pain of watching their lands stolen. And yet, they still held strong. They still lived and loved. They still believed in the old ways. They still passed it down. 

Because of them, I am. That much resilience and courage lives within me because it lived within them. I remember this every day.

No Kohala he pa‘a kō kea
E mau ke ea
E ola mau ka Hale Kū Pa‘a
E ola mau ka ‘Ōlelo Hawai’i 

*I colorized the photos I could on an app and it was the first time I saw my kūpuna in color 😩😭

#mahinaolelohawaii Puu Huluhulu
Hāwane Rios Instagram – from mauna kea to palestine
we stand with you
now & forever

and when we say that
we mean it with everything we are

🤍

pa’akai & protocols
as we adorned in regalia to make offerings 
as we secured each pā‘ū with kākua
as we placed our feathers on the summit of our heads
as we tied our kīhei around of shoulders
i gave thanks for all of our teachers 
all of our elders
who showed the way
who taught us that solidarity means ‘ohana
who taught us that protocol is a sacred necessity
who taught us that prayer is our first layer of armor

oh how many times we have marched these streets
chanting for justice and change

for as long as i am here
i will stand for what i know in my soul is pono
& i will chant alongside these people right here
for the rest of my days
they are to me what the measure of a true aloha ‘āina really is
we stood together for over a decade 
and now we stand together
for Palestine 

aloha nā waipuna me nā ki‘owai o palekekina
mai nā kahawai a hiki loa i ka moananuiākea 
e mau ke ea o ka ‘āina i ka pono
i ke aloha i ka ‘oia‘i‘o
kũ nā kia’i mauna a wākea
kū nā kia’i palesetina ē
inshallah ē

to palestine, with love

‘āmama
ameen

📸: @queer_kanaka 🌀

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