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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, January 17, 2009

A CHANT FOR OBAMA
A Chant for Obama

Photo gallery: Chant for Obama

By Dennis Camire
Advertiser Washington Bureau

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Halau Ho'omau I ka Wai Ola O Hawai'i practices a chant that honors Barack Obama. The halau will perform it this weekend at a cultural festival in Washington, D.C., as the city prepares for Obama's inauguration. Below, Jantelle Wright is one of the seven bamboo stick players and 16 dancers in the Virginia halau's performance.

Photos by HEATHER WINES | Gannett News Service

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LEARN MORE

www.halau.org, Halau Ho'omau I ka Wai Ola O Hawai'i

www.halauoaulani.org, Halau O'Aulani

www.nmai.si.edu/outofmany, National Museum of the American Indian festival (Out of Many: A Multicultural Festival of Music, Dance and Story)

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Halau Ho'omau I ka Wai Ola O Hawai'i School held a dress rehearsal last Saturday at Hope Church in Alexandria, Va. "It give me chicken skin," a member said of the public performance they will give today.

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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OUR COVERAGE FROM D.C.

  • The Advertiser's Dan Nakaso and Kim Fassler report on the week's activities, including news from the inaugural balls where the Obamas are expected. Fassler will also blog and Twitter about the historic event.

  • We'll cover Tuesday's events at www.honoluluadvertiser.com with a live video stream and instant reader comments.

  • Guest Hawai'i bloggers — Julia Fahey and her Le Jardin Academy students, Mililani High School freshman Kelsi Watanabe and Stevenson Middle School teacher Sharri Peterson —provide their own perspectives on the inauguration.

  • Tell us how you plan to watch the inauguration:

    E-mail us at online@honadv.com

  • Got pictures to share? E-mail us at online@honadv.com or text your mobile-phone picture to 808-754-8266. Provide your name, phone number and the names of people pictured, or post your pictures in our Inaugural Gallery at www.honoluluadvertiser.com/readerphotos.

  • If you have video, e-mail us at photo@honoluluadvertiser.com.

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    Manu Ikaika, leader of Halau Ho'omau I ka Wai Ola O Hawai'i in Alexandria, Va., wrote the chant "Hiki Maila Ke Ali'i Ho'oulu" to celebrate the presidential inauguration of the Hawai'i-born Obama.

    The most famous chants were composed for Hawaiian kings and have been passed down for generations, said Ikaika, who was born in Honolulu and raised in Wai'anae but is now living in Manassas, Va.

    "It (the chant) speaks of a child coming from Hawai'i," Ikaika said. "And coming from Hawai'i, he brings the righteousness, the power, the spiritual feeling that I believe Hawai'i possesses to help our economy and the people of America."

    Following tradition, Ikaika wrote the chant in two versions: a mele inoa, which is a name song to be performed with music, and an oli, a chant performed without accompaniment.

    "I think we should give him every honor, and do so in creating this mele and oli for him," Ikaika said.

    At a dress rehearsal last Saturday, the 16 dancers and seven bamboo stick players — all wearing red pa'u dresses, kukui nut lei and maile haku lei — performed the chant.

    "It give me chicken skin," Napualokelani Kamakele Wiley, a Hawaiian from Wai'anae, said with a laugh. "It's a chance for us to showcase not just our halau, but the Hawaiian culture, hula, mele and the Hawaiian language."

    Wiley said she looked for a halau when she moved to the Washington area about eight years ago so she could stay in touch with her Hawaiian roots.

    "It keeps me close to Hawai'i," she said. "It keeps me close to our culture."

    Brandie Noelani Williams, now living in Woodbridge, Va., but originally from Hilo, feels joy in being involved with the performance.

    "I have a lot of pride in taking part. It's just exciting to be a part of everything," she said. "We're sharing our Hawaiian history and giving thanks for our new leader, the president of the United States, who is a child of Hawai'i."

    Halau Ho'omau I ka Wai Ola O Hawai'i (which means "through hula and halau, we remain young at heart and full of life") has about 80 members from Virginia, Maryland and Washington.

    The museum's multicultural festival runs today through Monday and will feature daily performances of live music, dancing and storytelling.

    Ikaika's group performs at 1 p.m. today and 3 p.m. tomorrow. Another Hawaiian group, Halau O'Aulani from Arlington, Va., performs at noon Monday.

    Camille Linsangan, originally from Manila in the Philippines but now living in Reston, Va., also was upbeat about performing the chant during the inaugural weekend.

    "It's a historic moment," she said. "I've never been in anything this important, and to see it all taking place to get to be able to do this is special for me."

    HIKI MAILA KE ALI'I HO'OULO

    He mele inoa no Obama

    THE LEADER OF INSPIRATION COMES

    Name chant in honor of Barack Obama

    Written by: kumu hula Manu Ikaika of Halau Ho'omau I ka Wai Ola O Hawai'i

    Dec. 7, 2008

    Language adviser: Puakea Nogelmeier

    (Ua haku ia e Manu Ikaika)

    © Manu Ikaika, Dec. 7, 2008

    E nana i ke ali'i, he kanaka ikaika

    He keiki o ka 'aina kupono la e

    He pua o Hawai'i, i kuhia i alaka'i

    Nana e ho'oulu i ka pono, aloha e

    'Ike 'ia ma ka lani la ka hikina 'ana mai

    Ka 'imi 'ana i ka pono me ke aloha

    Paulele 'ia ihola ka hulina

    'Oiai mau ke ea o ka 'aina i ka pono

    Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Hiki mai ke alaka'i e ho'oulu hou

    Uluhia maila

    ke ola o ka 'aina

    Aloha no, e

    He inoa no Barack Obama

    THE LEADER OF INSPIRATION COMES

    TRANSLATION:

    Look at our leader, a strong person is he

    A child from the land of righteousness

    A child of Hawai'i destined to lead

    Who will make goodness flourish, with aloha

    Signs in the heavens tell of the coming of a new chief

    Working for righteousness with love

    Belief in change is instilled in the heart

    For the life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness

    Let the story be known in the telling

    The leader to renew inspiration has come

    The living essence

    of the land flourishes

    We offer loving regard, indeed

    A name song for Barack Obama

    Reach Dennis Camire at dcamire@gns.gannett.com.