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Welcome to the Hawaiian books and activities of Kauai, Hawai’i, Maui and Molokai. You don’t have to have a Hawaiian wedding in Honolulu, or resort to expensive travel deals. Dive into our exotic waters and snorkel from one of our offerings to the next.


Our Hawaiian Cookbook Memoir ...

won First Prize in an International Competition. The judges explained that they had never seen such "fine writing in a cookbook." It is a real cookbook, not a recipe book; that is, it teaches you how to prepare the recipes. And there are 250 of them representing all six of the ethnic tables of Hawai’i (Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, European and, Hawaiian). No need to have a separate cookbook for each cuisine.

Our Authors ...

have grown up in the Islands or have lived the major portions of their lives here. They bring to their writings, whether about boats and sailing, Hawaiin Regional Cuisine, or hula wahine and Hawaiian culture, a depth that allows the reader to be confident of the authenticity of their material.

In addition to ...

the authors Diamond Hawai’i publishes, we also feature other Hawaiian authors and playwrights whom you may now wish to experience. Wayne Moniz is an award winning writer who works out of Maui and appeals to many who may remember the islands of an earlier day when great white ships brought movie stars and other interesting personalities to our sandy shores. (Click for more ...)

And also ...

there is William Wayne Dicksion, a story teller whose style allows the drawl and inflection of the old time teller of tales to emerge in the text. And Bill has been at his art a long time. (Click for more ...)

How We Got To Be Where We Are (lately) PDF Print E-mail
Hawaiian Culture
Written by Admin   
Tuesday, 21 October 2008

Image In the spring of 1819 King Ka-me-ha-me-ha I died after reigning for a peaceful decade over the first unified Kingdom of Hawai'i.  His young son, Li-ho-li-ho, became Ka-me-ha-me-ha II, but effective control of the government was inherited by the old king's favorite wife, Ku-hina Nui [Queen Regent], Ka'a-hu-ma-nu. 

That fall, under the queen's influence and that of Ke-opu-o-lani, his high chiefess mother, Li-ho-li-ho was forced to agree to the abandonment of the native Ha-wa-ii-an religion.

Five months later, amid the ensuing confusion, the first contingent of Calvinist missionaries arrived . It was a death sentence to the 1600 year old Ka-na-ka Ma-oli culture; the culmination of an attack which had begun shortly after Capt. James Cook's discovery of the Islands 42 years earlier.

In the process of undermining the culture, the missionaries created a written Hawaiian language, printed bibles and primers and started teaching.  The queen ordered all Kanaka, men, women and children to attend the mission schools.  

One reason she may have been so adamant was because the white man's diseases were killing the natives by the thousands.  Among those dying were the members of the chiefly families whose responsibility it was to memorize the long genealogies that placed rulers in their proper pecking order.  It is thought that the ability to write down this definitive family history-in addition to the convenience in doing business -may have influenced the queen's decision to allow the missionaries to stay, teach and to convert her followers.             

Near the end of the century, the Republic of Hawaii, operating under its third constitution, had the highest percentage of literate citizens of any country in the world.
In 1898 American businessmen overthrew the Republic of Hawai'i and gave the islands to the United States. It was a Territory until annexation as the 50th State in 1959.
    
Some of these historical events against which my novel, LEHUA (link), unfolds are only slightly telescoped in time.

 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 21 October 2008 )
 
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