Gerald Horne Events in San Francisco & Oakland

Fighting in ParadiseGerald Horne, the author of the recent Fighting in Paradise: Labor Unions, Racism, and Communists in the Making of Modern Hawai‘i, will be in San Francisco and Oakland next month for two events:

Saturday, October 1, 11 am
ILWU Local 10 Union Hall, 200 North Point
Professor Horne will also talk about his earlier book The White Pacific: U.S. Imperialism and Black Slavery in the South Seas after the Civil War, published by UH Press in 2007.

Sunday, October 2, 2pm
Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library, 6501 Telegraph Ave.
The presentation is entitled “Communists in Paradise? Racism and Radicalism in the Making of Modern Hawaii (and a US President).”

Oshiro Tatsuhiro’s The Cocktail Party

Oshiro TatsuhiroThe Cocktail Party, a play by Oshiro Tatsuhiro based on his Akutagawa Prize–winning book, will have its world premiere in Hawai‘i next month.

The first performance is on Wednesday, October 26, at 7 pm at the Hawai‘i Okinawa Center (in Waipio). Regular admission is $15; admission for seniors (65 or over) and students is $10. For ticket information, call 676-5400 or e-mail info@huoa.org. The second performance is on Thursday, October 27, at 7:30 pm at Orvis Auditorium (University of Hawai‘i–Mānoa campus). Admission is free. For ticket information, call 956-8246. Copies of Living Spirit: Literature and Resurgence in Okinawa and Voices from Okinawa will be available for purchase at $20 each at both performances. The Cocktail Party was published in Living Spirit, and Mr. Oshiro will be on hand to sign copies of the book.

The Orvis event will include a panel discussion of the humanities issues in the play. This portion of the project is sponsored by the Hawai‘i Council for the Humanities with support from the “We the People” initiative of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Mr. Oshiro will be participating, along with Frank Stewart and Katsunori Yamazato, the editors of Living Spirit.

This is the third in a series of events MANOA Journal has produced with the Manoa Readers/Theatre Ensemble and UHM Outreach College. Other sponsors include the UHM Center for Okinawan Studies, the University of Hawai‘i Japan Studies Endowment, the Manoa Foundation, and the UHM College of Languages, Linguistics, and Literature. Cosponsor of the HOC performance is the Hawai‘i United Okinawan Association.

For information about Mr. Oshiro, Living Spirit, or Voices from Okinawa, please contact Frank Stewart at 956-3070 or write to mjournal-l@lists.hawaii.edu. See http://manoaokinawaissue.wordpress.com/ for further information.

Upcoming Author Events in September

Carlos Andrade, author of Ha‘ena: Through the Eyes of Ancestors, will discuss how ancient and other points of view accumulate over time to create a unique story and sense of place. The event, “Telling the Story of Place: Ha‘ena,” will be held at the Kaua‘i Historical Society on Friday, September 16, at 5:30 pm. For more details, go to http://kauaihistoricalsociety.org/events/.

John Clark will be at Kaimuki Library on Sunday, September 18, to talk about his latest book, Hawaiian Surfing: Traditions from the Past. Go to HawaiiNewsNow for more information: http://urbanhonolulu.hawaiinewsnow.com/news/arts-culture/66825-meet-hawaiian-surfing-author-kaimuki-library.

The Japanese American National Museum will host a discussion by ShiPu Wang, author of Becoming American? The Art and Identity Crisis of Yasuo Kuniyoshi, on Saturday, September 24, at 2:00 pm. Check the JANM event calendar: http://www.janm.org/events/2011/09/24/ibecoming-american-the-art-and-identity-crisis-of-yasuo-kuniyoshii-by-shipu-wang/.

Interviews with Gerald Horne

Gerald HorneGerald Horne discussed his new book, Fighting in Paradise: Labor Unions, Racism, and Communists in the Making of Modern Hawai‘i, on KPFK 90.7FM’s Sojourner Truth with Margaret Prescod. To listen to the program, visit the KPFK online audio archive: http://www.archive.org/details/Sojournertruthradio090711.

In July Horne spoke extensively about Fighting in Paradise at politicalaffairs.net. Listen to the podcast: http://www.politicalaffairs.net/new-podcast-interview-with-historian-gerald-horne/.

Gerald Horne is also the author of The White Pacific: U.S. Imperialism and Black Slavery in the South Seas after the Civil War.

Photo: politicalaffairs.net

More Hawaiian Surfing News

Clark on Creativity ShowHawaiian Surfing: Traditions from the Past author John Clark will be a guest on The Creativity Salon, hosted by Neil Tepper on ‘Olelo Channel 52. The program “celebrates the creative arts and the art of living a creative life” in Hawai‘i. The episode airs Friday, August 19, at 8pm HST and repeats on August 23 and 30 at 12:30pm HST. It streams live during those times at http://olelo.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?publish_id=91 and will be archived at the show’s website. **Viewers will be invited to email the show to enter a drawing for a free, autographed copy of Hawaiian Surfing. Watch the show for details!

Hawaiian Surfing was also recently reviewed in MidWeek by Hawai‘i sportscaster Ron Mizutani, who calls the book:

“One of the most remarkable references I’ve ever seen and one that will be used by generations to come. The Hawaiian-English dictionary of surfing terms and Waikiki place names related to surfing reveal Clark’s true love for the sport. You will be amazed by what he has gathered.”

Photo: John Clark (left) and Neil Tepper. (Courtesy of The Creativity Salon)

Matashichi Oishi Featured on NHK

Last weekend Matashichi Oishi, author of The Day the Sun Rose in the West: Bikini, the Lucky Dragon, and I, attended a conference of the Japan Congress against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs in Fukushima, where the Dai-Ichi nuclear power plant is located. Oishi talked with residents and shared his experiences as a survivor of the U.S.’ 1954 nuclear tests in the Pacific. NHK news program “Japan 7 Days” coverage of Oishi’s Fukushima visit will be broadcast this weekend on NHK World TV and BS1 in Japan and will stream live at the NHK World TV website. After August 10, the program will be uploaded and viewable under “Recent Stories.” Visit http://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/english/tv/japan7/index.html for program times and details.

Author Talks and Signings by John Clark and Isaiah Walker

John R. K. Clark will present his eighth and newest book, Hawaiian Surfing: Traditions from the Past, on Sunday, July 17, from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m., at Native Books/Nā Mea Hawai‘i at Ward Warehouse (‘ewa end, 1050 Ala Moana Boulevard, phone: 597-8967). His informative talk will be followed by a book signing, refreshments, and informal discussion. The public is invited to attend this free presentation and books will be available for purchase.

On Friday, July 22, noon to 4:00 p.m., John Clark will participate in the “Authors Book Signing” at the 2011 Hawaiian Islands Vintage Surf Auction at Blaisdell Center. For more information, go to http://hawaiiansurfauction.com/.

Waves of Resistance Book Launch

Waves of ResistanceUniversity of Hawai‘i Press will launch the publication of Waves of Resistance: Surfing and History in Twentieth-Century Hawai‘i, by Isaiah Helekunihi Walker, on Saturday, May 7, 2011, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., at Native Books/Nā Mea Hawai‘i, Ward Warehouse (‘ewa end), 1050 Ala Moana Boulevard, phone: 597-8967.

Dr. Walker will give a talk and answer questions on his work, followed by a book signing, refreshments, and informal discussion. The public is invited to attend the free event. Books will be available for purchase and signing by the author.

2011 Ka Palapala Pookela Awards

The annual Ka Palapala Po‘okela Awards, presented by the Hawai‘i Book Publishers Association, honor Hawai‘i’s best books, authors, and illustrators. This year’s award ceremony will be held on Friday, May 6, 2011, 5:30-9:00 pm, at the Mission Houses Museum (free parking at Kawaiaha‘o Plaza, on the corner of South and Kawaiaha‘o streets).

Tickets are $30 and include entry to the Museum, pupu and cocktails, gourmet chocolates by Choco le’a, and entertainment by Na Leo Pilimehana. Click here to purchase tickets: http://www.hawaiibooks.org/ or stop by the Mission Houses Museum or Native Books. The awards will be hosted by Kimo Kahoano and Carole Kai.

This year’s UH Press nominees are:

Regulating Paradise: Land Use Controls in Hawai‘i, Second Edition, by David L. Callies
(Excellence in Text or Reference, Excellence in Design)

A Photographic Guide to the Birds of Hawai‘i: The Main Islands and Offshore Waters by Jim Denny
(Excellence in Illustrative or Photographic Books, Excellence in Natural Science)

Living on the Shores of Hawai‘i: Natural Hazards, the Environment, and Our Communities by Charles Fletcher, Robynne Boyd, William J. Neal, and Virginia Tice
(Excellence in Natural Science, Excellence in Text or Reference)

Bright Triumphs from Dark Hours: Turning Adversity into Success by David Heenan
(Excellence in Nonfiction, Excellence in Design)

Hart Wood: Architectural Regionalism in Hawaii by Don J. Hibbard, Glenn E. Mason, and Karen J. Weitze
(Excellence in Illustrative or Photographic Books, Excellence in Nonfiction, Excellence in Design)

The Value of Hawai‘i: Knowing the Past, Shaping the Future edited by Craig Howes and Jonathan Kay Kamakawiwo‘ole Osorio
(Excellence in Nonfiction)

Hawaiian Birds of the Sea: Na Manu Kai by Robert J. Shallenberger
(Excellence in Illustrative or Photographic Books, Excellence in Natural Science)

Mauri Ola: Contemporary Polynesian Poems in English edited by Albert Wendt, Reina Whaitiri, and Robert Sullivan
(Excellence in Literature)

Polynesia: The Mark and Carolyn Blackburn Collection of Polynesian Art by Adrienne Kaeppler (distributed for Mark and Carolyn Blackburn)
(Excellence in Illustrative or Photographic Books, Excellence in Design)

Hart Wood Receives Historic Hawaii Foundation Award

Hart WoodHart Wood: Architectural Regionalism in Hawaii, by Don Hibbard, Glenn Mason, and Karen Weitze, will be recognized with a Preservation Honor Award at Historic Hawai‘i Foundation’s 2011 Awards Ceremony on April 19. This is the 36th year of the Preservation Honor Awards, which are Hawai‘i’s highest recognition of preservation projects that “perpetuate, rehabilitate, restore or interpret the state’s architectural, archaeological and/or cultural heritage.”

“With insightful text and 200 illustrations, Hart Wood traces the life and work of a significant Hawai‘i architect who resided and practiced in the islands from the 1920s to the 1950s. The wide range of buildings he designed has special significance for us today, as fine examples of this period’s distinctive regional style of Hawaiian architecture. The book is the culmination of years of extensive research, documentation, and the compilation of photographs and materials, which was first initiated in the 1980s. The University of Hawai‘i Press worked closely with the authors to design and produce a volume to match their vision. . . . [An] outstanding contribution to Hawai‘i’s preservation efforts.” —Hawai‘i Historic Foundation award letter

Mark Panek Launches Big Happiness

Mark Panek will present Big Happiness at several events on O‘ahu, including a community forum at the KEY Project in Kahalu‘u and a book launch at Native Books. All are open to the public with no attendance fee. Books will be available for purchase.

* Thursday, April 14, 12:00 noon to 1:15 p.m.; Center for Biographical Research, Henke Hall 325, 1800 East-West Road; phone 956-3774. Brown Bag Biography talk on life-writing.

* Friday, April 15, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.; KEY Project, 47-200 Waihe‘e Road, Kahulu‘u; for more information: John Reppun, phone 239-5777. A celebration of Percy Kipapa and public forum on land-use and drug issues will include speakers from the community and refreshments. The parents, other family, and friends of Kipapa will attend. http://www.keyproject.org/keyproject/

* Saturday, April 16, 12:30 to 1:15 p.m.; Kuykendall Hall, UH-Mānoa (check room location that day), part of the Celebrate Reading Festival; for more information: Lorna Hershinow, 239-9726, email: hershinow@gmail.com. In this session of Celebrate Reading, the author will discuss the general aspects of biography, based on his writing experiences with Big Happiness. [best link: http://hihumanities.org/index.php/events-calendar/401-celebrate-reading-2011]

* Saturday, April 16, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m.; Native Books/Nā Mea Hawai‘i, Ward Warehouse; phone: 597-8697. The author will give a talk and reading, followed by a book signing and informal discussion. Light refreshments will be provided.

Q&A with Big Happiness Author Mark Panek

Big Happiness
Big Happiness: The Life and Death of a Modern Hawaiian Warrior is a heartfelt look at the life of Percy Kipapa, the relationship between post-statehood development and Hawai‘i’s drug problem, and Waikane, Kipapa’s hometown in rural Windward O‘ahu.

After a successful career in Japanese professional sumo, Kipapa (known professionally as Daiki, or Big Happiness) returned to a Hawai‘i that had little to offer him in the way of economic opportunity. Seven years after his return, Kipapa was found murdered in the pickup truck of a friend—a drug dealer out on bail who later confessed to the killing.

Author Mark Panek, who met Kipapa while working on a biography of Akebono, draws on extensive interviews with Kipapa, his family and friends, other Hawai‘i sumo competitors, and Windward O‘ahu community leaders to tell the story of the struggles many young local men face growing up in rural O‘ahu. Panek, who teaches in the Department of English at the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo, agreed to answer a few questions about the book and his experience writing it.

Q: How did you come to write about Percy Kipapa?
It was at his funeral. Something more than sadness hung over the proceedings, given the tragic nature of Percy’s death. And while we all experience our own personal grief, I got the sense that at least at some point, everyone there was thinking: of all people, how could this have happened to Percy? Well over a thousand people rotated through the reception line throughout the day—an image that also spoke to what an incredibly warm and generous guy Percy was. And when I reached Percy’s mother in line—I’d met her once, three years earlier, for less than five minutes—she immediately recognized me as Percy’s “writer friend” and said that someone should have written a book about what her son had accomplished, but that now it was too late.

Q: Your book has been called “part mystery, part investigative journalism, part poignant Island portrait.” How do you write a book that crosses so many different genres?

I’d begun with the idea of simply honoring Percy for his parents, but structurally, the book began to take on a life of its own by focusing on that question: of all people, how could this have happened to Percy? That led me to have to define Percy as the type of guy who would have over a thousand people show up at his funeral, which in turn led into having to talk about all the events (including those directed by Percy himself) that conspired to put Percy in the truck on the night he was killed. That required me to historicize such things as post-statehood development, Hawai‘i’s drug war, land use issues in Waikane Valley, and others. To say it out loud makes it sound like a boring history book, and in early drafts readers kept saying, “Well, that’s interesting, all that stuff about Operation Green Harvest, but what does it have to do with Percy?” The challenge was in talking about such things and maintaining some sense of tension by moving Percy’s immediate story back and forth between foreground and background. You know, you hear abstract terms all the time—terms like “social impacts” or “colonization” or “gentrification” or even “ice epidemic” without really seeing concretely what those things mean. I doubt most readers will pick up the book having any idea who Percy Kipapa is, but hopefully they will come to see his story as a concrete example of these sorts of terms. If Percy is to become the human face attached to all these abstractions, then by necessity you’re asking your narrative to do a number of different things, often at the same time.

Q: How do you anticipate Big Happiness being received by the Kipapa family and the Waikane community?
The Kipapa family, particularly Percy’s parents, were heavily involved in this project from the start. I suppose this question is getting at how Big Happiness turns its focus to the ice epidemic, and that’s a good question. Initially I wanted to avoid the whole thing, because, well, you didn’t want Percy to be remembered as a “druggie” or a “chronic.” But then when I began researching addiction, and talking to people like Andy Anderson [former CEO of Hina Mauka treatment center—not the developer/politician of the same name], and eventually discussing Percy’s drug use with his parents, I began to see that glossing over Percy’s addiction would simply be contributing to the ice problem. Part of the reason the ice problem has been allowed to persist for over twenty years now is that we’ve stigmatized users as people covered in scabs, with no teeth, who choose to be the way they are. It’s a convenient stance to take. I took it myself with Percy when he asked to borrow money from me. Four years later he was dead.

To answer the question more specifically, the Kipapas read the book in draft form and came away proud of what Percy was able to accomplish in such a short life—not just in sumo, but all of it, including his battle with addiction. As for the Waikane community and the surrounding area—the setting works not just because it’s where Percy grew up and was later killed; it truly helps define the extent of the problems that led to Percy’s death. From the anti-development battles of the 70s through the fights for water rights in the 90s, we’re talking about perhaps the most civically engaged community in the state. The initial island-wide sign waving efforts to finally confront the drug problem back in 2003 began right in Kahalu‘u. The place is practically on permanent neighborhood watch. And yet in spite of all that, Percy was killed there. My hope is that people see Big Happiness not as a criticism of their community, but more an attempt to shed light on a huge state-wide problem by saying, “Even here. Even in Kahalu‘u and Waiahole/Waikane. How in the world is that possible?”