"Impossible is where we start"
Welcome to our HOH ʻOhana!
Since 2015, our hui has been privileged to lead and participate in volunteer opportunities throughout the ʻEwa moku, specifically within the areas of Honouliuli and Waipahu.
At one point in time, Puʻuloa was the breadbasket of Oʻahu, providing food for thousands of kānaka. Between the late 1800ʻs and early 1900ʻs, our kupuna witnessed ʻāina become land and in modern day we now reap the consequences of the fruit that was sewn. ʻĀina, to our ancestors, referred to the land that feeds, and today it is a loose term for land. Due to the growing economy, the fertile soils and vast waters of ʻEwa have been lost and it is our kuleana as residents Hawaiʻi to find and return them home.
Our hope is that one day, all things and people will exist in lōkahi, unity. We will need your help to get there! Click on the tabs above to learn more about how you can get involved in making the impossible, possible.
Since 2015, our hui has been privileged to lead and participate in volunteer opportunities throughout the ʻEwa moku, specifically within the areas of Honouliuli and Waipahu.
At one point in time, Puʻuloa was the breadbasket of Oʻahu, providing food for thousands of kānaka. Between the late 1800ʻs and early 1900ʻs, our kupuna witnessed ʻāina become land and in modern day we now reap the consequences of the fruit that was sewn. ʻĀina, to our ancestors, referred to the land that feeds, and today it is a loose term for land. Due to the growing economy, the fertile soils and vast waters of ʻEwa have been lost and it is our kuleana as residents Hawaiʻi to find and return them home.
Our hope is that one day, all things and people will exist in lōkahi, unity. We will need your help to get there! Click on the tabs above to learn more about how you can get involved in making the impossible, possible.