The New Zealand Herald

Pasifika says aloha to Hawaiian performers

- Vaimoana Tapaleao

Hawaiian hula takes centre stage at the Pasifika Festival this year, with one of the event’s largest groups to take the stage travelling here especially.

More than 150 dancers and family members associated with the Na Maka o Pu’uwai Aloha studio, based in Waipahu, will touch down in Auckland tonight ahead of Pasifika, which kicks off tomorrow and Sunday at Western Springs Park.

Establishe­d in 1999, the group has performed to crowds in Hong Kong, Japan, France, London, California and most recently at the Macy’s Thanksgivi­ng Parade in New York.

They have also turned out to all the Disneyland parks around the world, save for the newly opened Disney Shanghai.

About 80 members of that group — including women, men and children as young as 10 — will be on stage at the increasing­ly popular Hawaiian village.

President of Na Maka, Mandi Scott, said the dancers had been planning a trip to New Zealand for about two years with the purpose of learning more about Maori culture and protocol, as well as other Pacific identities.

“On our travel list, there are so many places I wanted to go to and New Zealand was one of the main ones,” she said.

“This trip is for us to come and share our hula. We are going to stay in Rotorua at a marae, for us to really learn about the Maori culture and to see how they appreciate it.”

They will perform several traditiona­l dances and hula on Sunday, as well as a special chant honouring the goddess Pele.

The Pasifika Festival’s reputation had reached them long ago, Scott said, and for many in their group, it would be the first time they would experience so many other Pacific cultures in one place. She also hoped those on the trip reconnect with their Hawaiian roots, given this new opportunit­y to showcase it to a crowd that is arguably not too familiar with Hawaiian performanc­e.

As well as dance and performanc­e, there will be arts and crafts stalls and lots of food — both contempora­ry and traditiona­l — specific to that particular island.

Pasifika 2018, being delivered by Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Developmen­t, will again feature 11 villages — Cook Islands, Tuvalu, Tonga, Tokelau, Tahiti, Samoa, Niue, Hawaii, Kiribati, Aotearoa and Fiji. This year’s Pasifika celebrates its 26th birthday and is being held later than the usual second weekend in March.

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 ?? Pictures / Dean Purcell, Doug Sherring ?? Dancers from the Na Maka o Pu’uwai Aloha studio (above) will perform this weekend. Inset: Plenty of Pacific delicacies will be consumed at Western Springs. Left: Cook Island dancers will be among the many performers this weekend.
Pictures / Dean Purcell, Doug Sherring Dancers from the Na Maka o Pu’uwai Aloha studio (above) will perform this weekend. Inset: Plenty of Pacific delicacies will be consumed at Western Springs. Left: Cook Island dancers will be among the many performers this weekend.
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