Emma Stone Kauhi

Emma Stone Kauhi

Auntie Emma was born in rural Kapaʻahu, Puna, and was punished at school for speaking her mother tongue. She never lost her love for hula and language, ultimately contributing to the renewal of ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi in the late 1900s. (1916-2008)
Credit: 
Credit: Hula Preservation Society, Digital ʻUmeke, Emma Stone Kauhi

Auntie Emma was the only kūpuna hula we met with in the early years of HPS who was a native speaker of ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian Language). Being from the rural lands of Puna on Hawaiʻi Island, her country-style upbringing set her apart from most elders we had spoken with by that time, for she was raised immersed in her mother tongue. Most others we were interviewing came from families who had made the decision, conscious or otherwise, to not pass on the language to their children during a time of great change and westernization for the islands. When we met Auntie Emma in her twilight years, she was living in Hilo but shared how she had lost her Puna home to Pele years earlier. The most striking comment from that discussion was that she was "happy" her home had burned from Pele's heat (versus being run over by lava), so she could collect her insurance to rebuild. That sums up our kūpuna; persevering through difficult times and circumstance and finding the blessings! 

Items in Collection: 
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Community
Kaiāulu
Category
Nā Moʻolelo (Oral Histories)
PICT0051FORMATTED.jpg
Community
Kaiāulu
Category
Nā Moʻolelo (Oral Histories)