Edith Kanakaʻole’s hula legacy thrives at Hawaiʻi CC

VIDEO NEWS RELEASE

鶹ý Community College
Contact:
Katie Young Yamanaka, (808) 780-4466
Public Information Specialist, Hawaiʻi Community College
Posted: Apr 2, 2026

Kumu Pele Kaʻio’s class learns to make kūpeʻe and lei poʻo.
Kumu Pele Kaʻio’s class learns to make kūpeʻe and lei poʻo.
Kamryn Kanoe Bosque performs at last year’s Hōʻike.
Kamryn Kanoe Bosque performs at last year’s Hōʻike.
Hawaiʻi CC students ask permission to enter their kīhei ceremony.
Hawaiʻi CC students ask permission to enter their kīhei ceremony.
Kekoa Gabriel graduated in 2025 with A.A. degrees in Hawaiian Studies, hula and Kapuahi foundations
Kekoa Gabriel graduated in 2025 with A.A. degrees in Hawaiian Studies, hula and Kapuahi foundations

Link to video and sound (details below):


As Hilo prepares for Merrie Monarch, Hawaiʻi Community College is highlighting its associates in arts degree in Hawaiian Studies with a hula concentration, rooted in the legacy of revered kumu hula Edith Kanakaʻole. Her philosophy: “Teach all who come to learn.”

Kanakaʻole established Hawaiian Studies at Hawaiʻi CC in 1973. Her daughter, Pualani Kanahele, expanded this vision to revive hula rituals. 

The program has strengthened students' cultural identity and connection to ʻohana (family). Kekoa Gabriel, a 2025 honors graduate with multiple AA degrees, found the program clarified his kuleana (responsibility).

“Because of this program I feel a lot more connected to my ancestors, my ‘ohana, my Hawaiian-ness, who I am as a Hawaiian,” Gabriel said. “I have a better look at where I want to go as a Hawaiian, who I want to be as a Hawaiian.”

Kamryn Kanoe Bosque, pursuing her degree with a hula focus, added, “I expanded my knowledge more than I ever could have, and I’m deeply grateful to be able to come here and learn more about my Hawaiian culture.”

The program includes unique hands-on practices, such as learning hula Pele (the Hawaiian goddess whose home is Kīlauea on the island of Hawaiʻi) where the volcano is active.

Hula, a ‘living practice’

“Studying hula here at Hawaiʻi Community College goes beyond choreography,” Kumu Hula Pele Kaʻio. “It exposes the learner to protocol, ceremony, traditional regalia, discipline and leadership.”

The program’s impact is evident during Merrie Monarch, where participation in the annual festival’s opening ceremony has grown from about 30 individuals to more than 400 ritual practitioners, including Hawaiʻi CC students, alumni and community members.

Taupōuri Tangarō, founder and advisor of the college’s hālau hula, Unukupukupu, said the Kanaka‘ole ohana’s mission remains central. 

“Hula becomes the doorway through which learners come to know their purpose,” Tangarō said. “Students come to Hawaiʻi CC not simply to learn hula as performance, but to experience hula as a living practice grounded in ritual.”

VIDEO: (TRT 2:26)

BROLL: (1:30)

Hawaiʻi CC students practicing hula and learning how to make lei in class, and their semester Hoʻike performance, led by Kumu Pele Kaʻio. 

SOUNDBITES: 

Pele Kaʻio, HawaiʻI CC Assistant Professor of Hawaiian Studies and Kumu Hula (:17)

“Studying Hula here at Hawaiʻi Community College goes beyond choreography. Its goes beyond dance, it really exposes the learner to protocol, it exposes the learner to ceremony, to traditional regalia, to discipline and to learner ship.” 

Kekoa Gabriel, Hawaiʻi CC honor graduate(:19)    

“Because of this program I feel a lot more connected to my ancestors, my ohana, my ‘Hawaiian-ness’ who I am as a Hawaiian. I have a better look at where I want to go as a Hawaiian, who I want to be as a Hawaiian.” 

Kamryn Kanoe Bosque, Hawaiian Studies student, concentration in hula (:17)

“Coming here I expanded my knowledge more than I ever could have, and I’m deeply grateful to be able to come here and learn more about my Hawaiian culture and especially Hula because it's something that I want to take seriously in the future for sure and not just have it be a class.”