sustainaibility | University of Hawaiʻi System News /news News from the University of Hawaii Tue, 28 Apr 2026 23:50:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /news/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-UHNews512-1-32x32.jpg sustainaibility | University of Hawaiʻi System News /news 32 32 28449828 Hundreds of keiki gather for Lā Honua 2026 at 鶹ýHilo /news/2026/04/28/keiki-la-honua-2026-uh-hilo/ Tue, 28 Apr 2026 23:50:17 +0000 /news/?p=233203 Guided by “Huli ka lima i lalo, ola,” the event featured demonstrations, conservation work and presentations centered on mālama ʻāina.

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Two keiki painting
Nearly 900 K–12 students representing about a dozen schools attended

The University of 鶹ý at Hilo and 鶹ý Community College co-hosted , a dynamic, multi-day Earth Day celebration. Guided by the theme “Huli ka lima i lalo, ola” (hands that are turned down to do work, bring life), the event featured demonstrations, conservation efforts and speaker presentations designed to encourage the community to mālama ʻāina (care for our land).

Keiki searching in grass
Students participated in a wide variety of hands-on demonstrations and workshops

A centerpiece of the celebration took place on Lā Honua (Earth Day) at UH Hilo featuring an Earth Day Fair for K–12 students and a Conservation Career Fair for college students.

Amy Fullerton, a second-grade teacher from Dz Elementary School, emphasized the necessity of the event. “We need to teach the students about how important our earth is because it’s their future.”

Students were thrilled to engage in interactive activities outside the traditional classroom setting. From building their own water systems to learning about how camouflage helps animals in the wild to creating artwork using traditional Hawaiian materials and methods.

Inglis smiling
Kerri Inglis

For UH Hilo faculty, engaging with the keiki provided a joyful change of pace. Professor Kerri Inglis spent the morning teaching children how to make ti leaf lei. Representing Hui Mālama Makanalua, an organization dedicated to honoring and remembering the residents of Kalaupapa on Molokaʻi, Inglis reflected on the university’s long-standing tradition to mark Lā Honua.

“We’ve all come to really appreciate our connections, and so taking the time once a year to celebrate Earth Day is important,” said Inglis, who chairs the Social Sciences Division in the . “It’s an opportunity to express gratitude for where we are and recognize that we’re responsible not just to this island, but our Earth is an island that we need to take care of as well.”

For more, go to .

people working together to make lei
Students learned how to make lei lāʻī or ti leaf lei
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