Hula halau honor Kalakaua’s legacy

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Kelsey Walling/Tribune-Herald The statue of King David Kalakaua is adorned with lei and gifts in honor of his birthday at Kalakaua Park in Hilo on Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021.
Kelsey Walling/Tribune-Herald People hold hands and sing together to celebrate the birth of King David Kalakaua.
Kelsey Walling/Tribune-Herald At Kalakaua Park in Hilo on Tuesday, Iwalani Kalima explains the need for a ceremony honoring the legacy of King David Kalakaua on his birthday.
Kelsey Walling/Tribune-Herald Kumu Moses Crabbe performs the hula in honor of the birth of King David Kalakaua at Kalakaua Park in Hilo on Tuesday. Halauolaokalani led a small ceremony to celebrate Kalakaua's legacy.
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Hula halau from Hawaii Island gathered at Kalakaua Park on Tuesday to celebrate the birth of King David Kalakaua and to honor his legacy as the last monarch of Hawaii.

Kalakaua was born Nov. 16, 1836, and is known for reviving hula and reawakening Hawaiian pride and nationalism for the kingdom.

“We wanted to honor him, because without him reviving and bringing back our culture, we would have lost even more,” said kumu Iwalani Kalima. “He brought hula to his palace and showed the people of the world our culture.”

Kalima referenced a popular quote of Kalakaua’s about the importance of hula to the Hawaiian people.

“Hula is the language of the heart, therefore the heartbeat of the Hawaiian people.”

“This is why we want to come,” Kalima said. “He was known to our people, because through the hula was how our culture revived. So, we have to keep honoring him.”

This was the second annual ceremony for Kalakaua’s birthday, and the halau plan to keep the tradition alive every Nov. 16.