- Makahiki
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The Makahiki season was the ancient Hawaiian New Year festival, in honor of the god Lono of the Hawaiian religion.
It was a holiday covering four consecutive lunar months, approximately from October or November through February or March. Thus it might be thought of as including the equivalent of modern Thanksgiving and Christmas traditions. Many religious ceremonies happened during this period. The people stopped work, made offerings to the chief or aliʻi, and then spent their time practicing sports, feasting, dancing and having a good time. War during those four months was forbidden (kapu).
Today, the Aloha Festivals (originally Aloha Week) celebrate the Makahiki tradition.[1]
Contents
Festivities
The Makahiki festival was celebrated in three phases. The first phase was a time of spiritual cleansing and making hoʻokupu, offerings to the gods. The Konohiki, a class of royalty that at this time of year provided the service of tax collector, collected agricultural and aquacultural products such as pigs, taro, sweet potatoes, dry fish, kapa and mats. Some offerings were in the form of forest products such as feathers. The Hawaiian people had no money or other similar medium of exchange. These were offered on the altars of Lono at heiau - temples - in each district around the island. Offerings also were made at the ahupuaʻa, stone altars set up at the boundary lines of each community.
All war was outlawed to allow unimpeded passage of the image of Lono. The festival proceeded in a clockwise circle around the island as the image of Lono (Akua Loa, a long pole with a strip of tapa and other embellishments attached) was carried by the priests. At each ahupuaʻa (each community also is called an ahupuaʻa) the caretakers of that community presented hoʻokupu to the Lono image, a fertility god who caused things to grow and who gave plenty and prosperity to the islands.
The second phase was a time of celebration: of hula dancing, of sports (boxing, wrestling, sliding on sleds, javelin marksmanship, bowling, surfing, canoe races, relays, and swimming), of singing and of feasting. One of the best preserved lava sled courses is the Keauhou Holua National Historic Landmark.[2]
In the third phase, the waʻa ʻauhau — tax canoe — was loaded with hoʻokupu and taken out to sea where it was set adrift as a gift to Lono.[3] At the end of the Makahiki festival, the chief would go off shore in a canoe. When he came back in he stepped on shore and a group of warriors threw spears at him. He had to deflect or parry the spears to prove his worthiness to continue to rule.
Arrivals during the season
A royal birth during the season was sometimes given the name Lono i ka makahiki.
The sails and masts of Captain James Cook's ship resembled Lono's Akua Loa. Captain Cook arrived at Kealakekua Bay, near a large heiau to Lono, during the Makahiki season in 1778.
Origin
In the Hawaiian language, the word Makahiki means "year"[1] as well as the change from harvest time to the beginning of the agricultural season. This is probably came from Makaliʻi hiki the rising of the Pleiades which occurred about this time.[4] It might also come from ma Kahiki, meaning roughly "as in Tahiti", since the legend of Lono is associated with voyages to and from Tahiti.Its origins are linked to the "return" of Lono, during one of the early migrations, in the form of a mortal man.[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel Hoyt Elbert (2003). "lookup of makahiki ". in Hawaiian Dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii Press. http://wehewehe.org/gsdl2.5/cgi-bin/hdict?j=pk&l=en&q=makahiki&d=. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
- ^ "Hoʻihoʻi Kulana Wahi pana - Restoring Sacred Places". Kamehameha Investment Corporation. 2008. http://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/about/pdfs/kic_brochure.pdf. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
- ^ Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel Hoyt Elbert (2003). "lookup of waʻa ʻauhau ". in Hawaiian Dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii Press. http://wehewehe.org/gsdl2.5/cgi-bin/hdict?j=pk&l=en&q=wa%CA%BBa+%CA%BBauhau&d=. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
- ^ Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel Hoyt Elbert (2003). "lookup of Makalii ". in Hawaiian Dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii Press. http://wehewehe.org/gsdl2.5/cgi-bin/hdict?j=pk&l=en&q=Makalii&d=. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
- ^ Veronica S. Schweitzer (2006). "The Pleiades Rise". Coffee Times. http://www.coffeetimes.com/pleiades.htm. Retrieved September 21, 2010.
Further reading
- Handy, E. S. C. Ancient Hawaiian Civilization. Honolulu, HI: Mutual Publishing, 1999.
- Handy & Handy "Native Hawaiian Planters" B.P. Bishop Museum
- "The Rebirth of Makahiki" Article about past and current Makahiki activities. Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine Vol.10 No.4 (September 2006)
- "Makahiki - The Hawaiian New Year" On-line article on Makahiki traditions.
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