Monday, December 29, 2014

Keahialaka - Leilani Estates



Keahialaka is at Latitude  19.47/Longitude 154.9
When we first bought our house in the Puna District on the Big Island of Hawaii, I remember reading that our subdivision had a historical place name of Keahialaka Ahupua’a.  (Ahupua’a is an old Hawaiian term referring to a traditional socio/economic, geographic and climatic area of land.)

Here is some information from hawaiianhistory.org:   The ancient ahupua`a, the basic self-sustaining unit, extended elements of Hawaiian spirituality into the natural landscape. Amidst a belief system that emphasized the interrelationship of elements and beings, the ahupua`a contained those interrelationships in the activities of daily and seasonal life. Shaped by island geography, each ahupua`a was a wedge-shaped area of land running from the uplands to the sea, following the natural boundaries of the watershed. Each ahupua`a contained the resources the human community needed, from fish and salt, to fertile land for farming taro or sweet potato, to koa and other trees growing in upslope areas. Villagers from the coast traded fish for other foods or for wood to build canoes and houses. Specialized knowledge and resources peculiar to a small area were also shared among ahupua`a.

And here is an interesting story about Pele and how she is associated with the place where we live.  This information was taken from Hawaiian Legends of Volcanoes, William Drake Westervelt 1916

Lunel's Art -- "Green Flash"
"When Pele came to the island Hawaii, she first stopped at a place called Ke-ahi-a-laka in the district of Puna. From this place she began her inland journey toward the mountains. As she passed on her way there grew within her an intense desire to go at once and see Ai-laau, the god to whom Kilauea belonged, and find a resting-place with him as the end of her journey. She came up, but Ai-laau was not in his house. Of a truth he had made himself thoroughly lost. He had vanished because he knew that this one coming toward him was Pele. He had seen her toiling down by the sea at Ke-ahi-a-laka. Trembling dread and heavy fear overpowered him. He ran away and was entirely lost. When she came to that pit she laid out the plan for her abiding home, beginning at once to dig up the foundations. She dug day and night and found that this place fulfilled all her desires. Therefore, she fastened herself tight to Hawaii for all time." 



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