Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Religion Over Culture? Essay
I love Hawaiââ¬â¢i. I donââ¬â¢t love Hawaiââ¬â¢i just for its everlasting sunshine, unique cuisine, or historical landmarks. My love for Hawaiââ¬â¢i runs deep because of the vast diversity we have here. There is no place like Hawaiââ¬â¢iââ¬âit is the melting pot of all cultural groups and religious affiliations who have found a home in the islands. Itââ¬â¢s within this melting pot that the aloha spirit really shines through, really making it the perfect vacation destination. I am the epitome of that melting pot being that I have 14 nationalities. Although I come from many different backgrounds, I firmly believe and try to perpetuate my Hawaiian culture and my Christianity. Truly being a Hawaiian Christian is probably the hardest person to be because of its confliction between the belief in many gods in a Hawaiian sense and its cultural actions to believing in one God as a Christian. But I consider myself a Christian Hawaiian because I have faith in my God and persistence in my culture. As a Hawaiian, I am all about perpetuation. Our culture had been almost lost once so I believe in keeping it alive forevermore. Some may argue that to be ââ¬Å"Hawaiianâ⬠you must be of Hawaiian birth, speak ââ¬ËÃ
lelo Hawaiââ¬Ëi[1], or be a Hawaiian practitioner just as the kÃ
«puna[2] of ancient Hawaiââ¬â¢i. If a person is willing to genuinely respect, practice, and perpetuate a culture, it should be enough for them to be considered a part of said culture. In my Hawaiian Language class, it is my responsibility to start oli[3] and pule[4], which is proper protocol at Kamehameha Schools. With this responsibility, I essentially start the class. I say my prayers, but in the language of my people so that I honor both sides. This privilege is one that not all schools can say that they do. For that, I am thankful to have been accepted to a school that allowed me to express both my culture and religion where they can both co-exist in harmony. If I went to a school where I couldnââ¬â¢t express either, I know I would be an entirely different person. Itââ¬â¢s this expression of culture and religion that really allowed me to understand not only my values but others as well. With that in mind, to a college community, I can bring to the table my Christian and Hawaiian values. I am a Hawaiian, but with a western mind. I wouldnââ¬â¢t put my religion over my culture or vice versa because both mean a great deal to me as they shaped me to be the person I am today. He Hawaiââ¬Ëi au, mau a mau [5] and a Christian.
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