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 Ahe ʻāina nani o Honokahua 
Ka hono kaulana a o Piʻilani 
Me nā puʻu one ku i ka mālie 
Haliʻi mau ana nā ʻiwi kupuna 
Ua ʻike makou i nā waiwai nui 
O na moʻolelo a ke au kahiko 
Mai hoʻoniʻoni i ka nohona lā 
I ka lahui e a o Amelika 
Hui pu mei kakou no nā kupuna 
E malama pono i ke one  hānau 
E hui hou kakou a haliʻaliʻa 
I ke one kaulana o Honokahua 
E malama e ka ʻehu kai 
Me ka ahe makani kupa o ka ʻāina 
Hui pu mei kakou no nā kupuna 
E malama pono  i ke one hānau
 
Haʻina ʻia mai ana ka puana 
E Honokahua ʻāina nani maoli 
Na Hono kaulana a o Piʻilani 
ʻIa wahi kapu nā kupuna e 
ʻIa wahi kapu nā kupuna e 
ʻIa wahi kapu nā kupuna e
 
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  This beautiful land of Honokahua 
The famous bay of Maui`s King Piʻilani 
With its peaceful sand hills 
That covers the bones of our kupuna 
We have always known 
This place contains the history of our people 
It shall not be disturbed 
By the people of America
 
People of Maui, unite for our kupuna 
Protect our history, the place of my birth 
May all unite in recalling 
Famous sand of Honokahua 
Drenched with sea spray 
That fetches the wind of the land 
People of Maui, unite for our kupuna 
Protect our history, the place of my birth 
Tell the story, give praise to 
The beautiful land of Honokahua 
With its famous bay of Piʻilani 
It shall not be distrubed, 
 this place where our ancestors sleep 
It shall not be distrubed, 
 this place where our ancestors sleep 
It shall not be distrubed, 
 this place where our ancestors sleep 
 
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  Source: Pandanus Club CD "Ho`ike"  Copyright Pandanus Club, Written January 4, 1987, verse 3, stanza 2 & verse 4,   stanza 4 refer to the composer's birthplace of Napili, 1 mile from the Honokahua Burial Grounds.  Hawaiians are lovingly connected to their keiki or future generations and also to their kupuna through their ancestors ʻiwi (bones, remains, life).   This forms the Hawaiian circle of life.  Honokahua was being developed when ancient bones and gravesites were uncovered.  The people of Maui united to stop the digging at the site.  Reports of the find were constantly denied by the developer and the Maui Planning Commission, who gave the developers permission to remove the ʻiwi, with every assurance that the sacred ʻiwi would not be disturbed.  A photograph of the construction site was released to the media showing the ʻiwi curled up in a grave.  Hawaiians throughout the state gathered at Honokahua and the State Capitol in protest.  John Waihee, then governor of Hawaiʻi, after several days of negotiating with the composer and others, immmediately stopped the digging.  800 bodies were removed.  A ceremony was held at the lab where the sacred ʻiwi was housed with Papa Kawika Kaalakea officiating.   Before the pule, Papa Kaalakea  announced, "who knows their song, this people have been dead over 15 hundred years?  Who knows their song?  Pua Kanahele chanted, Papa Kaalakea prayed and 7 were selected, including the composer, to re-wrap the remains of more than 1200 articulated ʻiwi.  There were over a thousand still in the ground, untouched.  That night , as Charles Maxwell watched  the news about Honokahua, he increduously called out to his wife and proclaimed, "I have their song , I wrote their song a year ago"!  He went to his computer, called Ken Makuakane and faxed him the song.  Makuakane asked  Malia Craver to put the Olelo Noeau to the translation.  Charles Maxwell and his wife, Auntie Nina, journeyed to Kona to attend the Keiki Hula festival.  There, Kihei De Silva presented the Hawaiian lyrics to the composer. Overwhelmed with emotion, tears were shed; the song was perfect.  Two weeks later, Ken Makuakane called Charles Maxwell at 1:00 A.M. and played the song while Roddy Lopez of Pandanus Club sang it to the answering machine.  The Ritz Carleton was moved away from the burial site and there was a celebration.  Many witnesses will verify the lightning and thunder when the Pandanus Club performed this song at the dedication of the Ritz Carleton Hotel.  Federal and State laws have since been enacted to protect Hawaiian burial sites and theʻ iwi of nā kupuna.   Visit Charles K. Maxwell, Sr. at http://www.moolelo.com 
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