Mililani Trask - Formation of Ka Lahui Hawai'i

Formation of Ka Lahui Hawai'i

Trask returned to Hawaii and joined the growing native struggle over land control and development. She began community organizing on sovereignty issues, setting up conferences and workshops and doing extensive legal research into native land claims. In 1987, Trask and others founded the group Ka Lahui Hawai'i (the Hawaiian People). Ka Lahui is a self-proclaimed sovereign Hawaiian nation with over ten thousand members; a democratic constitution with a bill of rights; and four branches of government—including an elected legislature (the Pakaukau), representing thirty-three districts, and a judiciary system made up of elected judges and an elders council. Voting is restricted to those with Hawaiian blood. (Native Hawaiians are the 220,000 people of Hawaiian ancestry in the state, of whom about 10,000 are pure-blooded.) Trask has twice been elected kia'aina of the group, the equivalent of governor or prime minister. Trask hopes the nation will eventually be rooted in the nearly two hundred thousand acres of Hawaiian homelands and the 1.4 million acres of original Hawaiian lands ceded to the state by the federal government. In Ka Lahui Hawai'i, according to Trask, native Hawaiians would have a relationship similar to that existing between the United States and federally recognized Native American tribes and native Alaskans. The tribes, whose members have dual status as citizens of the United States and as "citizens" of the tribe, can impose taxes, make laws, and control their lands.

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