To Send Canoes Around The World, It Takes A Community

The Mālama Honua Worldwide Voyage is a 47,000-mile circumnavigation of the Earth on two Polynesian double-hulled sailing canoes. It couldn't be done without support from the community.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

The Mālama Honua Worldwide Voyage, sponsored by Hawaiian Airlines, is a 47,000-mile circumnavigation of the Earth on two Polynesian double-hulled sailing canoes. These voyaging canoes, Hōkūleʻa and Hikianalia, are travelling to 85 ports in 28 countries to help grow the global movement toward a more sustainable world. The Hawaiian name for this voyage, Mālama Honua, means "To care for our Earth."

Our crew has been waiting in Hilo, Hawaiʻi for nearly two weeks for the right winds and weather for the journey to Tahiti. I was also in Hilo in 1999 during the preparation for Hōkūleʻa's departure to the South Pacific and Rapa Nui (Easter Island). At the time I was a new crew member, wide-eyed, trying to get a handle on the seemingly endless list of details that needed to be checked and rechecked before the voyage could be sanctioned for departure.

Now, some 15 years later, on the eve of this historic departure for these canoes and crews, it really is amazing to see how much of the preparation process of has remained the same. Hilo has been the staging point for many voyages to the South Pacific because of the easting that the canoes will need to get as they sail south. Hilo being one of the most eastern points in the Hawaiian chain makes the job that much easier from the start. But, Hilo is a perfect launching point for a slew of other reasons. Hilo's spirit of hoʻokipa, or giving and offering, has epitomized the sense of community that we intend to take with us around the globe.

Literally thousands of members of our ʻohana waʻa (canoe family) have come to see the canoes. School groups by the busloads have come to share mele (songs) and hoʻokupu (offerings) to the canoes and crew. But if one looks a little closer, they can start to really notice how well this community still understands the sense of aloha. Every day for the past 10 days this community has come out to feed the crew three meals a day. Cars have been dropped off to help with last minute runs to the store. People have come without any expectation of personal gain to give of their time to just help us prepare for this 47,000 mile journey. Just this morning after sunrise, one of the uncles from nearby came to drop off a dozen or so lei, that he personally strung together with flowers from his yard, just to "Aloha" the canoes. He didn't even ask to come aboard, rather, he left them in the care of one of our watch captains to bless the canoes with the sweet fragrance that reminds us all of Hilo.

What started as a mere dream to take our vessels around the world has come to full fruition, thanks in no small part to this sense of aloha, kuelana (responsibility) and sincere belief that the expansive ʻohana waʻa has in the mission of the canoes. From large corporations that are based on the East Coast to the woman who set up her own tent and massage table at Palekai to massage the sore muscles of a worn crew, they are all part of a this community, the ʻohana waʻa. It just so happens that this community is bound by the values that come from these vessels rather than the geographical space that they occupy. And for me, as a crew member, as a media maker and as a father, my great hope is that Hōkūleʻa and Hikianalia will travel the globe connecting a community that helps us all to recognize that we are all not that different if we look at our values and what makes us want to move forward together, as citizens of Island Earth.

hokulea sunset

Hōkūleʻa, Hawaiʻi's storied traditional voyaging canoe, sets sail to Hilo, Hawaiʻi. (Hōkūleʻa Image ® Polynesian Voyaging Society. Photo © ʻŌiwi TV)

Close

What's Hot