Jon Osorio's Response to the "Ceded" Lands Settlement: An Open Letter to the Lahui
May 23rd, 2009 by Trisha Kehaulani WatsonOn May 5, 2009, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs announced a joint statement / settlement of the "ceded lands" lawsuit with the State of Hawai`i. As noted in the statement, all plaintiffs, except University of Hawai`i Professor, musician and author Jonathan Osorio, participated in the settlement. Osorio was out of the country at the time and could not issue a response.
Here is his full response.
Letter to the Lāhui:
Early this week I was a part of a panel “Hoʻopunipuni: The Myth of Statehood” organized by Arnie Saiki, in Los Angeles. Julian Aguon, Kekuni Blaisdell, Kuhio Vogeler and I all spoke about the many different and connected deceptions that have maintained the fiction that Hawaiʻi belongs to the United States.
We discovered that the audience, largely consisting of Hawaiians living in Southern California, was desperate to understand the nature and direction of the sovereignty movement in Hawaiʻi. They wanted to be connected to and contributors to the movement but did not understand why there was fighting between Kanaka Maoli in Hawaiʻi, why there was such opposition to Kau Inoa and the Akaka Bill, what the US Supreme Court decision on the Ceded Lands implied, and mostly when we in Hawaiʻi would finally give them a unified and clear path to follow.
I told the audience that we fight among ourselves in part because of the pernicious and ingrained deceptions that America has provided that have succeeded not only in disguising its imperial nature in the world but also convincing Kanaka Maoli that the US has some legitimacy in its claims to our land and our loyalty. To their complaints that we seemed to be fighting among ourselves, I replied that we have not just one American lie to contend with, but one lie after another, collectively confusing issues and making it difficult to achieve consensus, much less unanimity, yet we grapple with this constantly, striving to base our movement on fact and truth and some sense of honor.
I do believe that we will continue to disagree over many things, but I see no reason why we should not eventually get to the point where we can at least agree on how we see the US/Hawaiʻi relationship and understand the factual history of that relationship. Before we assume that some Hawaiian people will always be Americans by choice, let us at least be sure that they know the history that even America concedes.
Simply: The US assisted and participated in a conspiracy that helped fewer than a hundred armed malcontents take control of a nation that ruled over more than 38,000 subjects ardently loyal to the Queen. The US violated its own constitution in accepting the cession of the regime it sponsored and impounded nearly 2 million acres of kingdom property pretending that it was a legal annexation. The US imposed a colonial government on an independent nation state and allowed the colonial administration to lease and sell the very best lands of the Kingdom to a small number of already wealthy plantation owners during the first half of the twentieth century. In 1921 the US passed a homestead act in Congress setting aside slightly more than 1/10th of the land it took to benefit the poor and struggling Hawaiians, after first defining who would qualify according to a random assignment of blood quantum, and allowing the same territorial government to fund and parcel the lands as they saw fit.
By 1941, Hawaiʻi was considered an American colony by the international community which seemed to forget that the Kingdom had been a recognized, independent nation state until the United States formed the territorial government, and was placed on the list of “Non self-governing territories” by the newly formed United Nations in 1947.
In 1959, the US declared Hawaiʻi the 50th state after removing Hawaii’s name from the roster of Non self-governing territories and reporting to the UN that Hawaiʻi had been incorporated into the American union by a plebiscite in which more than 90 percent of the vote had chosen statehood. In truth less than thirty percent of Hawai`iʻs residents had actually voted and the only choices voters were given were statehood or continued status as an American territory. At this point, if there were Hawaiians left who remembered that we had been an independent country, they were not talking. Under UN auspices, greater scrutiny should have been applied to the process by which America claimed statehood for Hawaiʻi. Without international voices and with few published objections to our incorporation the US proceeded to transfer control of nearly one and a half million acres of Kingdom lands and Liliuʻs crown lands to the state government requiring only that the new state government assume the trust responsibility once borne by the US government for the native people.
In 1977 a federal-state task force investigating the Hawaiian Homes Act discovered that only a small fraction of qualifying Hawaiians had received homestead lands while a majority of the lands were leased out to non-qualified residents in order to raise funds to administer the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. Moreover, other ceded lands had been leased or sold without any benefit allocated to Native Hawaiians, an apparent violation of the requirement stipulated in the transfer of those lands to the state government in 1959. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs was created in 1978 in order to create an agency that could receive state monies and act on behalf of Native beneficiaries. In 1978 the Hawaii Supreme Court and the Legislature both confirmed that Hawaiians were entitled to a 20 percent pro rate share of ceded land revenues because of the terms of the Statehood Act.
In 1989 a story in the Wall Street Journal detailing the continued failure of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands had the Hawaiʻi State governments and the US government pointing the finger of blame at each other, although the Task Force in 1977 had already proposed a remedy: spend a billion dollars, half immediately and half over ten years and build the infrastructure necessary to put qualifying Hawaiians on the land. Neither would and both accused the other of bearing the responsibility. In 1998, the governor of Hawaiʻi acknowledged that a 20 percent share of ceded lands revenues to the Office of Hawaiian Affairs would amount to ten million dollars. He offered five million as the maximum that the revenue strapped government could afford and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs accepted.
Partly in response to a mounting frustration with the failure of the US to live up to its commitments, and partly in recognition of the dire poverty in which many Hawaiians found themselves, thousands of Hawaiians began to explore sovereignty as an alternative to continued poverty and marginalization. But a growing number of political and community activists and scholars began to analyze the nature of Americaʻs possession of Hawaiʻi and has since identified several different avenues of liberation.
One political avenue is to emphasize the Kanaka Maoli’s status as an indigenous people, which places us under the protection of the UN’s Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples; A second acknowledges Hawaiʻi as an American colony, not lawfully decolonized, under the UN’s Article 73. A third focuses on the national status of the Hawaiian Kingdom and its rights under international laws to re-secure its independent status and the end of American military occupation.
Perhaps in response to these national and indigenous affirmations, US Senator Daniel Akaka proposed an alternative in 1994 that would recognize Hawaiian natives as a native people under the jurisdiction of the Congress and is finally poised to pass this legislation known as the Akaka Bill this year. The protections and assurances of this bill became more and more detrimental to Native Hawaiians over the past fifteen years in order to placate a hostile congress and administration. The shape taken by federal recognition has occurred with almost no consultation with Hawaiian organizations.
Regardless of the provisions of the Akaka Bill, federal recognition is merely the latest deception of the US government that it has some legitimate claim to Hawaii’s sovereignty and its lands. The naked truth is that our ancestors created a national government in the 1840s, structured by democratic laws and principles; created property similarly structured by modern laws and principles; secured treaties of recognition, cooperation and friendship; never raised a hostile hand against the United States or any of its citizens; honored the principles of international laws and covenants and strongly and uniformly opposed the takeover by the US in 1897.
Hawaiians today may claim that they have been Americanized, but not without fully understanding how this has come about, not through one deception only, but through a series of deceptions that continue to this day. In my opinion, it is possible that Hawaiians could choose continued incorporation with America or a federally recognized status as preferred political futures. But it would be a betrayal of our ancestors to base that choice on lies. It is also quite clear that we are legally entitled to that choice. Perhaps when all Hawaiians can agree on the history of how we have been claimed by America, we will have fewer fights over who we are and how we should proceed.
It is important that Hawaiian organizations and agencies like the Office of Hawaiian Affairs do not perpetuate deceptions by pressing for quick and immediate solutions to difficult political issues. As an agency whose mission is to seek the betterment of the Native people, the Kanaka Maoli, it should be leading the attempt to research, uncover, chronicle and discuss the history of our relationship with the United States. It should not be hurrying a process that Hawaiian people have not fully discussed. Unfortunately, its official position with regard to federal recognition is that time will only erode the political, economic and social conditions of Native Hawaiians in Hawaiʻi and that the Akaka Bill, regardless of its provisions, offers the only foreseeable relief.
Hawaiian sovereignty activists see the restoration of a Hawaiian nation as a long-term process of education, advocacy and requiring a commitment on the part of Hawaii’s people, not just Natives, to a just resolution of the American fraud. It is not likely that OHA can exert much leadership in this kind of dynamic, and it appears that its strategy, more and more, is simply to try and isolate the sovereignty movement as either hopeless or irrelevant. The extent to which this strategy wastes the talents and energies of a growing number of Kanaka Maoli is the true measure of its failure of leadership.
Finally, America’s insistence that it has legally taken our sovereignty has consequences for the fate of the Crown and Government lands. Whenever the US or state governments can assert an unchallenged claim to these lands, we as a nation are a step closer to losing them. Thus far, both governments have been able to assume ownership merely by possessing and controlling these lands and by virtue of US declarations in the Newlands Resolution, the 1900 Organic Act and the 1959 Statehood Act. The Hawaiʻi Supreme Court’s 2008 injunction against the sale of Ceded Lands because of our “un-relinquished claims” was a significant protection of our lands and claims which would afford us the time and the political support that our movement has only rarely received.
When the US Supreme Court’s opinion remanded the case back to Hawaiʻi, I concluded that we needed to fight this case again, arguing even more strenuously than ever that the Crown and Government lands are the property of the Hawaiian Nation and that the US permanent control over it is unlawful. OHA and the other plaintiffs chose to dismiss the suit in exchange for state legislation which, in my opinion, simply emphasizes the State’s possession of these lands and maintains the fiction that our national claim is limited or unobtainable. It is my belief that we should attempt to secure this injunction once more in the Hawaiʻi courts and require the United States to call forth or create the law that dispossesses us. That, at least, would clarify our relationship with America and bring forth the patriots who will lead us home.
Written in the Republic of Ireland
May 11-15, 2009
Jonathan Kay Kamakakawiwoʻole Osorio



May 23rd, 2009 at 10:09 am
Awesome letter -- mahalo nui!
My only additional thought is this: it seems to me that the U.S. Supreme Court's decision makes an excellent launching point for international legal or related (e.g. decolonization, etc.) action, but I'm not hearing much discussion on this. As Uncle Tom Maunupau used to say over and over again, it's "letting the thief decide the punishment for the crime." So now that the thief has confirmed that he has no intention of acknowledging the illegality of his continued actions (much less righting them), shouldn't this decision be subject matter for international scrutiny?
Aloha, Laulani
May 23rd, 2009 at 2:31 pm
Wow...where do I begin to poke holes in this rambling of mistruths. I love the comment that it's the U.S.'s fault that the Hawaiians can't get along. Blaming everyone else is a serious problem here in the islands. May I suggest taking a good look in the mirror and quit blaming everyone else for your misfortunes. The "woe is me" attitude loses its effect after 100 years.
And the continued fabrication that the U.S. was somehow complicent in the "overthrow" of the Queen. A small Marine contingent was sent in to protect American interests and they are always blamed for overthrowing a whole Kingdom. Doesn't say much for the Queens guard if that was true.
Quit looking for a handout and get on with life.
May 23rd, 2009 at 3:54 pm
Mahalo nui loa mau e Kamakawiwo'ole! To a Hero who lives up to his name, there is only great pride and aloha for you, in Hawaii and among Hawaii's Own. I forward your letter far and wide to help America and every country on earth know of Hawaii's enduring and woeful plight!
How is it that in this Age of Information, the TRUTH of Hawaii's status is unknown? The answer lies in your writings here, dear Jonathan, clear as the waters surrounding Papahanaumokuakea. As crisp and succinct as those alert to their calling will require and not any too soon for those same hearts to be quickened and moved beyond the point of no return.
Aloha me ka Mahalo Mau,
Mikahala
May 23rd, 2009 at 4:40 pm
The Republic of Hawaii did not "steal" the lands from the Kingdom of Hawaii. There was a revolution which overthrew the Kingdom government.
It is ludicrous to claim that the U.S. invaded and established a puppet regime. There were only 161 U.S. peacekeepers who came ashore, similar to what was recently done in Liberia in anticipation of possible violence. Most of the U.S. peacekeepers left Hawaiian soil within a short while, and on April 1 the few remaining ones were sent away.
The Provisional Government and Republic held power all by themselves for 5 years, with zero U.S. assistance and no U.S. troops for 5 years, and in the face of open hostility against them from U.S. President Grover Cleveland (friend of Liliuokalani). There's no way that was a U.S. puppet regime.
The temporary revolutionary Provisional Government spent more than a year convening a Constitutional Convention (at least five of the delegates were ethnic Hawaiians), writing and ratifying a Constitution, and establishing a permanent Republic of Hawaii (the Speaker of the House was ethnic Hawaiian). That Constitution and the names of the delegates who wrote it can be seen at
http://tinyurl.com/dmyf82
The new successor government, the Republic, naturally governed all the lands which had formerly been governed by the predecessor government of the Kingdom. That's what happens when there's a revolution -- the successor government takes over all the assets belonging to the previous government.
The Republic was internationally recognized. In Fall, 1894, kings, queens, emperors, and presidents of 20 nations on four continents personally signed letters granting full diplomatic recognition de jure to the Republic as the rightful government of Hawaii. The originals of those letters are in the Hawaii archives, and photographs of them can be seen at
http://tinyurl.com/4wtwdz
Since the Republic was internationally recognized as the rightful government, it had the right under international law to offer the public lands of Hawaii as part of a negotiated agreement for annexation to the United States four years later. The Republic in 1897 offered a treaty of annexation, which the U.S. accepted in 1898, in which the U.S. was not allowed to simply take over the public lands of Hawaii and add them to the U.S. land inventory. Instead, the Republic drove a hard bargain with the U.S., requiring the U.S. to hold the ceded lands as a public trust for the benefit of all Hawaii's people. The U.S. also, as part of the annexation, agreed to pay off the national debt of Hawaii, which was mostly the debt from the Kingdom, and whose value was greater than the value of the ceded lands. Thus, in effect, the U.S. bought the ceded lands but generously held them only as a trust for Hawaii's people, and later returned them to Hawaii's people. In 1959, when Hawaii became a State, those lands were returned to the new State of Hawaii in fee simple absolute except for national parks and military bases. Thus the public lands of Hawaii from the Kingdom are now the public lands of the State of Hawaii, and those public lands are controlled today by the government of Hawaii on behalf of all Hawaii's people without racial distinction, just as they were at the end of the Kingdom period. Ethnic Hawaiians did not collectively own the public lands during the Kingdom (which was multiracial) and certainly do not own the lands now.
For a deeper analysis of the current political situation in Hawaii and how the Akaka bill fits into that bigger picture, see my book "Hawaiian Apartheid: Racial Separatism and Ethnic Nationalism in the Aloha State" at
http://tinyurl.com/2a9fqa
May 24th, 2009 at 4:31 am
Funny how Ken likes to point out how these men who landed on Hawaiian shores were peace keepers. Because that's not how they were described in James Blount's extensive report.
As for Robert Lee, the "divide & conquer" technique has worked before and it is working. Blood quantum for one was never a Hawaiian concept, only an American one. And due to what Osorio had written which you obviously overlooked, people have different perception due to the multitude of lies.
May 24th, 2009 at 9:35 am
Maika'i loa!
Anything that draws out the detractors of sovereignty (see comments above) this quickly has hit the mark.
Bottom-line, if America's claim of sovereignty and dominion over the Hawaiian Islands was rock solid (again, see previous comments) then the discussion would already be over. The fact that its not speaks quite clearly.
May 24th, 2009 at 10:30 am
I have been following this battle only for a short few months here on the Mainland through forwarded information of good friends and Hawaiians with much to loose. I find some of the posts above to be informational and then somewhat rude. "Quite looking for a handout and get on with your life"?? Thats sounds more like a sour note from an opposite end of the spectrum and Mr. Lee is entitled to his opinion, but the posts are more helpful to be factual information.
I applaud the efforts of the groups battling to keep Hawaiian lands in Hawaiian hands but let the high courts do what they must. I think that if the justice system works fairly for everyone, then they work for Hawaiians too. I am Hawaiian and I know all to well that Hawaiians are trusting, and a simple people. So with all that is said about the overthrow and "well, they signed documents" or "they know what was happening at that time", I think there is a lot to be said about "honesty" in much of this on the side of the US government.
So much has been taken from Hawaiians, even "Hawaiians" as a people is not even recognized throughout America. Hawaiians have their own culture, language, way of life, systems of living and caring for the one land that is theirs to learn to live on what God has provided for them. A perfect example of wealth of Hawaiians is the word "Aloha". Not just a word of greeting, it a way of life.
Aloha,
Makanaaloha
May 24th, 2009 at 12:22 pm
It is with much honor to see the loyalty of John Osorio towards truth and justice according to the misapplication of legalities toward the hawaiian people. It is ongoing, the protest that was given from our Queen more than 100 yrs ago. With clean hands:
LILIUOKALANI'S
TESTIMONY
Hawaii's Story
by:
Her Majesy
Queen Liliuokalani
Oh, honoest Americans, as Christians hear me for my down-trodden people! Their form of government is as dear to them as yours is precious to you.
Quite as warmly as you love your country, so they love theirs. With all your goodly possessions, covering a territory so immense that there yet remain parts unexplored, possessing islands that, although near at hand, had to be nuetral ground in time of war,
DO NOT COVET the little vineyard of Naboth's, so far from your shores, lest the punishment of Ahab fall upon you, if not in your day, in that of your children, for "be not deceived, God is not mocked."The people to whom your fathers told of the living God, and taught to call" Father" and whom the sons now seek to despoil and destroy, are crying aloud to Him in their time of trouble;
and He will keep His promise, and will listen to the voices of His Hawaiian children lamenting for their homes.It is for them that i would give the last drop of my blood; it is for them that I would spend, nay, am spending, everthing belonging to me. Will it be in vain? It is for the American people and their representitives in congress to answer these questions. As they deal with me and my people, kindly, generously, and justly, so may the Great Ruler of all nations deal with the grand and glorious nation of the United States of America...
May 25th, 2009 at 11:37 am
Maika'i no e Kamakawiwo'ole! Your work, your fight does not go unnoticed and you are a true leader for the lahui. Detractors with the same old tired arguments are nothing but that....they existed in the time of our Queen and they exist today, attempting to divide and confuse our people. It has worked for too long but today we have scholars/leaders who have diligently researched the documented history of our past and have taught new generations of kanaka the history that we were never taught in American schools. Language banning is one of the most insidious and effective tools in disconnecting a people from their past. The rebirth of 'Olelo Hawaii has opened the door to the past, to the mana'o of our kupuna. We learned of a deep and concerted effort that resisted the takeover of our nation. That resistance continues today and is gaining momentum. The Akaka Bill and the "Ceded Lands" case have done much to galvanize and unite sovereignty proponents. Many different groups have come together to oppose the sale of "ceded" lands. Kumu Osorio is the only one of the former plaintives that continues the fight for our lands and we must unite behind him. You are a true hero, a Nawahi of our time. Mahalo nui loa ia Kamakawiwo'ole.
May 26th, 2009 at 10:11 am
I hear a great deal of victimization in the letter. As long as Hawaiians view themselves as victims, they shall remains so.
Aloha,
Keahi
June 1st, 2009 at 6:33 pm
Hi, cool post. I have been wondering about this topic,so thanks for writing.
June 2nd, 2009 at 11:39 am
Great blog. Can't wait to see what you come up with next!
June 2nd, 2009 at 11:41 am
Doesn't it take up a lot of time to keep your blog so interesting ?
June 15th, 2009 at 5:18 pm
How soon will you update your blog? I'm interested in reading some more information on this issue.