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Kapiʻolani CC Library Spotlight

Watch HULI: Kokua Hawaii and the Beginning of the Revolutionary Movement in Contemporary Hawaiʻi — streaming video

by Erica Dias on 2021-04-12T13:14:00-10:00 in Communication (COM), Community Health Worker (CHW), Economics (ECON), General, Hawaii, Hawaiian Studies (HWST), History (HIST), Hospitality & Tourism (HOST), Interdisciplinary Studies (IS), Law (LAW), Miscellaneous, Pacific Islands Studies (PACS) | 0 Comments

 

Huli: Kokua Hawaii and the Beginning of the Revolutionary Movement in Contemporary Hawaiʻi premiered at the 2020 HIFF Fall Festival, and is now available for streaming to the UH Community. You can find the film via the library’s website, or visit:

Huli is accessible to all students and staff in the UH Community via UH Streaming Videos.
Please feel free to use the included announcement on your social media and to share with your friends and communities.

People, Not Profits - Huli! Photo by Ed Greevey 1971.

From Ulukau: “Marchers protest Kalama Valley evictions and threats to surf sites at this joint Save Our Surf (SOS)/Kōkua Hawaiʻi demonstration at the state capitol. Kōkua Hawaiʻi is the name the Kalama Valley eviction protesters gave to their organization.”

 

Moani Akaka and Kalani Ohelo (at right) at Kalama Valley, photo by Ed Greevy 1971.

From Ulukau: “TV news reporters interview Hawaiian activist Moani Akaka during Kalama Valley occupation and standoff with the Bishop Estate.”

 

George Santos pig farmer at Kalama Valley, photo by Ed Greevy 1971.

From Ulukau: “George Santos’ pig farm had been evicted from several places before he said, ‘The Bishop Estate will evict me over my dead body,’ sparking a major political/social movement still felt today in Hawaiʻi.”


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