Ebook {Epub PDF} Nānā I Ke Kumu Volume 1 by Mary Kawena Pukui






















Pukui, Mary Kawena, E. W. Haertig, and Catherine A. Lee. Nānā I Ke Kumu: Look to the Source, Volume I. Honolulu: Hui Hānai, Call number: DUP84 Produced for the Queen Liliʻuokalani Children's Center as a resource for social workers, these two volumes were the result of meetings held at the center where Pukui would provide information about Hawaiian culture and life cycles. Nana I Ke Kumu (Look to the Source) is dedicated to the families and children of Hawaii. It is a source book of Hawaiian cultural practices, concepts and beliefs which illustrate the wisdom and dignity contained in the cultural roots of every Hawaiian bltadwin.ru Estimated Reading Time: 3 mins. Mary Kawena Pukui, E. W. Haertig, Catherine A. Lee. Hui Hanai, - Social Science - pages. 0 Reviews. Nana I Ke Kumu (Look to the Source) is dedicated to the families and children of Hawaii. It is a source book of Hawaiian cultural practices, concepts and beliefs which illustrate the wisdom and dignity contained in the cultural roots of every Hawaiian bltadwin.ru Hawaiian lived for many years isolated .


A traditional 'olelo no' eau (proverb), i ka ¯ 'olelo ke ola, i ka 'olelo ka make, "in the language is life, in the language is ¯ ¯ death," speaks to the power of language, as words have the ability to heal ¯ or destroy.1 'Olelo is "language, speech, word, utterance; to speak, say, ¯ tell; oral communication.2 'Olelo is the root of our. Pakaa, na Kahu Iwikuamoo o Keawenuiaumi, ke Alii o Hawaii, a o na Moopuna hoi a Laamaomao" (c. ), concisely rendered into English as "The Wind Gourd of La 'amaomao." This saga of the 16th century heroes Ku-a-Nu'uanu, his son Paka'a, and Paka'a's son Ku-a-Paka'a, is a refreshing story offering rare insights into pre-contact Hawai'i. Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. Nana I Ke Kumu (Look to the Source) is dedicated to the families and children of Hawaii. It is a source book of Hawaiian cultural practices, concepts and beliefs which illustrate the wisdom and dignity contained in the cultural roots of every Hawaiian bltadwin.ru Hawaiian lived for many years isolated from the rest of the world, with a viable culture that.


Nana I Ke Kumu (Look to the Source) is dedicated to the families and children of Hawaii. It is a source book of Hawaiian cultural practices, concepts and beliefs which illustrate the wisdom and dignity contained in the cultural roots of every Hawaiian bltadwin.ru Hawaiian lived for. Mary Kawena Pukui describes ho‘olana—restorative travel—as a traditional remedy for extended, unresolved grief (Nānā i ke Kumu, I). Emma to Fanny Kekelaokalani, her mother, , Emma Collection, NA7, State Archives. Mary Kawena Pukui, excerpted from the mele "A Kilohana ‘o Kalani" in "Ancient Hulas of Kaua‘i," 1. Mary Kawena Pukui. Author or co-author of the Hawaiian-English dictionary, Olelo Noeau, Hawaiian Planters, Nānā i ke Kumu, and other seminal texts, Pukui was researcher at Bishop Museum for 50 years and the foremost authority on Hawaiian culture. Pukui. 1.

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