The Riverside Press-Enterprise

A volcano is sacred to spiritual practition­ers

- By Deepa Bharath and Audrey Mcavoy

MAUNA KEA, HAWAII >> Shane Palacat-nelsen’s voice drops to a reverent tone as he tells the story of the snow goddess Poliahu who Native Hawaiians believe inhabits the summit of Mauna Kea, the highest point in Hawaii.

The tale, repeated in Hawaiian families over generation­s, speaks of a chief who yearned to court Poliahu but was stopped by her attendants guarding the sacred mountain top — the abode of the gods, cradle of creation and gateway to the divine.

Today, this sublime summit on Hawaii’s Big Island is also treasured by astronomer­s as a portal to finding answers to the universe’s many mysteries, creating varied — and sometimes incompatib­le — views on what’s best for Mauna Kea’s future.

The legendary chief eventually gained access to the summit on one condition: He was to step only on the same set of footprints left by the attendant escorting him up and down, said Palacat-nelsen. He says it’s a metaphor for why Mauna Kea must be protected from further human intrusion, pollution and erosion.

“You do not go up the sacred mountain unless you are called. You do not go up without a purpose.”

Mauna Kea is a dormant 14,000-foot shield volcano. In Native Hawaiian lore, it is the first-born son of the sky father and earth mother. The mountain’s dry atmosphere and limited light pollution make for a perfect location to study the skies — one of just a handful on the planet.

Over the past 50 years, astronomer­s have mounted a dozen giant telescopes on the summit, with several yielding exalted discoverie­s, like proving the Milky Way has a supermassi­ve black hole at its center. That particular research led to a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2020.

The proliferat­ion of observator­ies has troubled many Native Hawaiians, who have pushed back. In their view, such constructi­on is polluting the sacred mountain top, eroding the environmen­t and depleting natural resources. In 2019, thousands came out to protest a proposed $2.65 billion Thirty Meter Telescope project near the summit. This protest catalyzed the passage of a new state law transferri­ng jurisdicti­on of the mountain to a new stewardshi­p authority comprising scientists and Native Hawaiian cultural practition­ers.

No side wants to reduce this debate to a culture-versus-science conflict because Hawaiian spirituali­ty embraces science, or studying the physical world, and many astronomer­s respect Hawaiian culture. Some observator­y staff and cultural practition­ers are taking small, tentative steps toward new dialogue, but overcoming the cavernous divide will involve difficult conversati­ons and understand­ing different perspectiv­es.

FOR MANY, THE MOUNTAIN IS A TEMPLE

Mauna Kea, translated literally as “white mountain,” has the same progenitor­s — Wakea and Papahanaum­oku — as the Hawaiian people, according to stories, prayers and chants. After volcanic eruptions sent lava bubbling up from the ocean floor, it took more than a million years to form, growing into the tallest mountain on Earth when measured from its base in the Pacific Ocean.

The summit soars 13,796 feet above sea level, evoking an ethereal feeling as fluffy clouds swaddle its cinder cones and blanket its reddish, almost Mars-like soil. On a clear day, Mauna Loa, one of the world’s most active volcanoes, is visible.

Climbing Mauna Kea is like peeling the layers of an onion, says Kealoha Pisciotta, a cultural practition­er and longtime activist. The sacred mountain’s slopes are dotted with ceremonial platforms, ancestral burial sites and Hawaii’s lone alpine lake, whose waters are believed to possess healing properties.

“The higher you go, the closer your heart is to the heavens,” she says. “(The gods) can see you, feel you, hear you. The protocol is silence because we don’t need to be speaking in akua’s (creator’s) house. We need to be listening.”

Building and bulldozing on or near the summit threatens the people’s sacred connection to the land, Pisciotta said. In her spiritual practice, she considers the mountain and all aspects of creation such as fish, coral, trees and animals to be like older siblings.

“When they diminish our ancestors and our elder siblings, they diminish us, our life force and our existence. And that’s the reason people are saying no,” she said, referring to adding more telescopes.

Palacat-nelsen, who served on the working group that laid the foundation for the new authority, says to protect the mountain

and preserve the summit’s sacredness, people must step out of their silos with open hearts and minds, ready to have uncomforta­ble conversati­ons.

LOOKING TO THE SKY FOR ANSWERS

John O’meara, who moved to Hawaii to become the chief scientist at Keck shortly before the 2019 protest, is now a key player in that dialogue. He’s learning about the strong connection many Native Hawaiians have to Mauna Kea.

O’meara is fascinated by the similariti­es between spirituali­ty and astronomy.

“We are fundamenta­lly asking the same questions, which are: Where are we? Where did we come from? And where are we going? There is a deep connection to the universe…which is the thing that we should be focusing on,” he said.

Doug Simons, director of the University of Hawaii’s Institute for Astronomy, points to the opening lines of the Kumulipo, a centuries-old Hawaiian creation chant, which describes a scene strikingly similar to what astronomer­s believe existed during the Big Bang.

“When fundamenta­l space altered through heat/when the cosmos altered, turning inside out,” begins the chant, according to a translatio­n by Larry Kimura, a Hawaiian language expert. It continues a few lines later: “Then began the slime that establishe­d a physical space/the source of impenetrab­le darkness, so profound/the source of fathomless power, reincarnat­ing itself.”

The chant continues for 2,000 more lines, detailing the birth of coral, seaweed, fish, trees and, eventually, people.

The Kumulipo’s descriptio­n of a dark, eternal form of energy from which everything emerges sounds to Simons like dark energy, which astronomer­s believe predated the universe. Scientists can observe dark energy, which is causing the universe to expand at an

accelerate­d rate, by studying dark matter — invisible to the naked eye, but detectable through the study of distortion­s in galaxy shapes.

Mauna Kea’s telescopes are at the forefront of discoverie­s about this dark energy thanks to their “exquisite image quality,” Simons said.

IT’S A CULTURAL AND SPIRITUAL STRUGGLE

Lanakila Mangauil, a Native Hawaiian spiritual practition­er, was around 9 when he first stepped on the mountain for snow play at the lower elevations. His family never went to the summit.

“One of the important spiritual practices on Mauna Kea is our absence,” he said. “We stay off it because it is sacred.”

When he first ascended the mountain for ceremony, he was a high school senior and climbed with two of his friends. They stopped at altars, prayed near the upper cinder cones, offered chants and dance.

Mangauil does not like to use the word “religion” to describe his spiritual practice. Hawaiians don’t have a central religion, he said, but spiritual practices born of different communitie­s, families and environmen­ts.

“Our spiritual practice is not faith-based, it is knowledge-based,” he said. “Our gods and goddesses are scientific observatio­ns.”

For example, to understand the deities of Mauna Kea is to understand the mountain’s environmen­t and climate, Mangauil said. Poliahu is the snow goddess, sister of Pele, the goddess of volcanoes and denizen of neighborin­g Mauna Loa. Lilinoe is the goddess of fine mist. Waiau presides over the mountain’s subterrane­an reservoirs. Lake Waiau, associated with the god Kane, is where some Native Hawaiians bury their children’s umbilical cords. Its water is collected and used for healing and ceremonies. The summer solstice is an important ritual Mangauil observes on Mauna Kea as is a Makahiki

ceremony in the fall, which marks the start of the Hawaiian new year.

This is also a political and cultural issue for younger Hawaiians like Mangauil who considers himself a product of the Hawaiian Renaissanc­e. Prior generation­s lost their language as well as culture and religious practices after the U.s.-backed overthrow of the monarchy in 1893.

“We are reestablis­hing our spiritual relationsh­ip with the land, which was disrupted by colonizati­on.”

FINDING A WAY THROUGH DIALOGUE

Not all Native Hawaiians hold Mauna Kea sacred in a religious sense, including Makana Silva, an astronomer who grew up on Oahu and was raised Catholic. He is now a post-doctoral fellow at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico studying black holes and gravitatio­nal waves, and visited Mauna Kea’s summit for the first time three years ago.

Despite his personal religious beliefs, he is certain that the mountain contains what Hawaiians call “mana” — the spiritual life force that permeates the universe. Silva described a moment when he and his friend stood by Lake Waiau “in peace, silence and awe.”

He believes astronomy on the mountain should thrive so there is a place for Hawaiians to perpetuate their legacy of innovation.

“We have a responsibi­lity to future generation­s to leave behind these new inventions so they can go places you and I have never been able to dream of,” Silva said.

The future of astronomy on the mountain will in large part be decided by the Mauna Kea Stewardshi­p and Oversight Authority, which is taking over managing the mountain from the University of Hawaii. It will determine whether to renew the university’s 65year lease for the summit lands, which is due to expire in 2033, and subleases for lands used by all the mountain’s telescopes.

Simons is concerned about the consequenc­es if the leases aren’t renewed in time. The existing master lease says the telescopes must be dismantled and the land under them restored to their original states by 2033 if the lease is not renewed.

“The potential loss of Mauna Kea astronomy… would be catastroph­ic,” Simons said, adding that this would mean a tremendous loss of knowledge and opportunit­ies for Hawaii’s budding astronomer­s.

Palacat-nelsen doesn’t believe astronomy on the summit will end any time soon. But he does see the lease being renewed at a much higher price than the $1 a year the University of Hawaii pays now.

“You have to pay the best price for the best view,” he said.

He holds out hope for better understand­ing between the two communitie­s. He recently invited a handful of Keck astronomer­s and officials to his family’s “heiau” or place of worship on Big Island.

Rich Matsuda, Keck’s interim director and an engineer, was part of that group. He said the experience shed light on the extensive preparatio­n required to enter a sacred space, such as leaving one’s everyday troubles and anxieties outside, which can be challengin­g. He has since followed similar protocols when traveling to the summit and believes they could be shared more broadly with other telescope workers.

Palacat-nelsen said such efforts by observator­ies give him hope that people will become more mindful of their footprints on Mauna Kea, like the legendary chief who visited the snow goddess. Palacat-nelsen is grateful to his ancestors for preserving and maintainin­g Mauna Kea so current generation­s have the opportunit­y to experience the divine. He wonders if he can do that for posterity.

“Can they speak about me in that way 200 years from now?” he asks. “I hope.”

After 10 years

An additional 16 counties were created by 1860. San Bernardino County was carved out of San Diego County in 1853.

The size of San Bernardino County was decreased, but it is still the largest county in the contiguous United States. Kern County was formed in 1866.

 ?? CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The sun sets behind telescopes at the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii’s tallest mountain in 2019. A volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island is sacred to spiritual practition­ers and treasured by astronomer­s.
CALEB JONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The sun sets behind telescopes at the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii’s tallest mountain in 2019. A volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island is sacred to spiritual practition­ers and treasured by astronomer­s.
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 ?? ?? Los Angeles County included areas of what are now Ventura, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.
Los Angeles County included areas of what are now Ventura, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

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