
Homeless activists on Oʻahu are taking charge of the growing issue in the islands and tackling problems on their own terms. The University of Âé¶¹´«Ã½¡¯²õ seeks to amplify some of those voices and spotlight initiatives from Waiʻanae to Waim¨¡nalo.
The livestream conversation, Finding Home, Building Community, will be held on Friday, September 17 at 3 p.m. The forum will explore how a new generation of grassroots leaders are paving a path for finding homes and building community. The livestream event is open to the public. (.)
“If we build the right relationships, houseless people can be part of the solution, instead of people seeing us only as a problem,” said Twinkle Borges, an activist with Puʻuhonua O Waiʻanae, a village that has come together on state land on the shoreline near the Waiʻanae Boat Harbor.
Borges will be featured on the forum, alongside Jessy Freddy Francis (We Are Oceania); Tina Grandinetti, UH alumna who works at the state Legislature; Ronette Kawakami, associate dean at the ; James Koshiba (Hui Aloha); Blanche Macmillan (Hui Mahiaʻi Aina); and Lindsay Pacheco (Ka Poʻe O Kakaʻako).
Maya Soetoro-Ng, UH faculty with the , will serve as moderator.
“Houselessness is a complex problem and requires many solutions,” explained Soetoro-Ng. “This is a chance for us to examine some of the solutions that are really working, in which unsheltered families are coming together and building their own communities from the ground up.”
The Better Tomorrow Speaker Series is a joint venture of the Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Community Foundation, Kamehameha Schools and UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹.
Lead sponsors for this forum include the Matsunaga Institute for Peace and the William S. Richardson School of Law. Co-sponsors include Ceeds of Peace and the College of Social Sciences.
For more information, visit the UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ Better Tomorrow Speaker Series website or email btss@hawaii.edu.
