Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Native Hawaiians say telescope represents bigger struggle

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher

Walter Ritte has been fighting for decades to protect Native Hawaiian rights, inspiring a new generation of activists trying to stop constructi­on of a giant telescope they see as representa­tive of a bigger struggle.

In his early 30s, Ritte occupied a small Hawaiian island used as a military bombing range. Now at 74, he’s still a prolific protester, getting arrested this week for blocking a road to stop constructi­on of the one of the world’s most powerful telescopes on Hawaii’s tallest peak, which some Native Hawaiians consider sacred.

For activists who say they’re protecting Mauna Kea, the long-running telescope fight encapsulat­es critical issues to Native Hawaiians: the 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian kingdom, clashes over land and water rights, frustratio­n over tourism, attempts to curb developmen­t and questions about how the islands should be governed.

It’s an example of battles by Native Americans to preserve ancestral lands, with high-profile protests like Dakota Access pipeline leading to arrests in southern North Dakota in 2016 and 2017.

For Native Hawaiians, opposition to the $1.4 billion Thirty Meter Telescope isn’t universal — some support the educationa­l opportunit­ies from the project and are facing backlash from those questionin­g their identity.

Ritte’s first taste of activism came during a resurgence of cultural pride and identity that began in the late 1960s and 1970s. He and other Native Hawaiian men hid on the small island of Kahoolawe that the military used for bombing practice. They were arrested, but the U.S. eventually stopped the training.

“We didn’t know anything about ourselves as Hawaiians,” Ritte said of his youth. “When we got involved with Kahoolawe, we had no language, no history.”

The young people leading the fight against the telescope grew up learning about his experience­s and speaking Hawaiian amid an ongoing cultural renaissanc­e. A 30-year-old leader of the telescope protest, Kaho’okahi Kanuha, credits Ritte and the Hawaiian movement for allowing him to grow up rooted to his culture.

“Uncle Walter can talk about not knowing the language and not knowing the history. But he knew how to stand up, and he knew how to fight,” Kanuha said. “Because of the things they did, the results were Hawaiian language programs. The results were revitaliza­tion of the culture and of understand­ing and of awakening.”

At Mauna Kea, Kanuha wears a traditiona­l battle helmet as he speaks Hawaiian with protesters and negotiates with law enforcemen­t. Thanks to the movement, he said he was able to learn Hawaiian at an immersion preschool and eventually earn a bachelor’s degree in Hawaiian language from the University of Hawaii.

He’s fighting a project that dates to 2009, when scientists selected Mauna Kea after a global campaign to find the ideal site for what telescope officials said “will likely revolution­ize our understand­ing of the universe.” The mountain on the Big Island is revered for its consistent­ly clear weather and lack of light pollution.

The telescope won a series of approvals from Hawaii, including a permit to build on conservati­on land in 2011. Protests began during a groundbrea­king in 2014 and culminated in arrests in 2015.

Last year, the state Supreme Court upheld the constructi­on permit, though protesters are still fighting in court and at the mountain.

Thirty-four people, mostly elders, were arrested this week as officials try to start building again.

The swelling protest is a natural reaction to the pain Native Hawaiians have endured and the changes the islands have seen, said Glen Kila, program director of Marae Ha’a Koa, a Hawaiian cultural center.

“The pain began when they took people off the land,” he said. “And then they took governance and stewardshi­p of the land, like Mauna Kea.”

The battle is bigger than the telescope, said Hinaleimoa­na Wong-Kalu, a teacher and cultural practition­er.

“The TMT and Mauna Kea is just the focal point. For me it’s just a galvanizin­g element,” she said. “It goes back to the role that foreigners played and continue to play in Hawaii.”

From 18th century explorer James Cook’s arrival in the islands, to laborers brought to plantation­s and today’s tourism, the telescope is another example of outside interests overtaking Hawaiian culture, she said.

“They capitalize and commercial­ize our culture,” Wong-Kalu said. “They prostitute the elements that make us Hawaiian. They make it look pretty and make it look alluring in an effort to bring more money into this state.”

But not all Native Hawaiians see the telescope as representa­tive of past wrongs.

“My family feels that they’re trying to use the TMT to boost their sovereignt­y issue,” said Annette Reyes, a Native Hawaiian who supports the telescope project. “I want sovereignt­y for the Hawaiian people. I want them to have their country back. But TMT shouldn’t be the lightning rod for it.”

Reyes pointed to telescope officials’ pledge to provide $1 million every year to boost science, technology, engineerin­g and math education. She said opponents have called her a fake Hawaiian for supporting the project.

For some, it’s not just a political issue. It’s spiritual for Kealoha Pisciotta, who’s long fought the telescope.

“The problem is being Hawaiian today is a political statement,” she said. “We have to take political action to practice religion.”

Mauna Kea is a “living entity” that “gives life,” Kila said.

“So that’s a different philosophy from the scientific world, that it’s just a mountain that can be used for an observator­y. It can be developed. For us, that’s sacrilegio­us,” he said.

For Ritte and others, the telescope is the latest battle over Hawaiian culture. He spent 11 hours Monday lying attached to a grate in the road leading up to Mauna Kea’s summit with seven other protesters.

“We protected and saved Kahoolawe from the United States military,” Ritte said. “Now we have to save and protect the rest of our islands.”

 ?? CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Sunday file photo, Native Hawaiian activists pray at the base of Hawaii’s Mauna Kea, background. For activists who say they’re protecting Mauna Kea, the fight against the proposed Thirty Meter Telescope is a boiling point in Hawaiian history: the overthrow on the Hawaiian kingdom, battles over land, water and developmen­t and questions about how the islands should be governed.
CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Sunday file photo, Native Hawaiian activists pray at the base of Hawaii’s Mauna Kea, background. For activists who say they’re protecting Mauna Kea, the fight against the proposed Thirty Meter Telescope is a boiling point in Hawaiian history: the overthrow on the Hawaiian kingdom, battles over land, water and developmen­t and questions about how the islands should be governed.
 ?? CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Monday file photo, activist Walter Ritte, left, and others lie chained to a cattle grate blocking a road at the base of Hawaii’s tallest mountain in Mauna Kea, Hawaii, protesting the constructi­on of a giant telescope on land that some Native Hawaiians consider sacred. Ritte was in his early 30s when he became an activist for Native Hawaiian rights by fighting against military bombing on the island of Kahoolawe. Now at 74, he’s still a prolific protester.
CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Monday file photo, activist Walter Ritte, left, and others lie chained to a cattle grate blocking a road at the base of Hawaii’s tallest mountain in Mauna Kea, Hawaii, protesting the constructi­on of a giant telescope on land that some Native Hawaiians consider sacred. Ritte was in his early 30s when he became an activist for Native Hawaiian rights by fighting against military bombing on the island of Kahoolawe. Now at 74, he’s still a prolific protester.

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