Pili Ka Moʻo

The Fukumitsu ʻOhana (family) of Hakipuʻu are Native Hawaiian taro farmers and keepers of this generational practice. While much of Oʻahu has become urbanized, Hakipuʻu remains a kīpuka (oasis) of traditional knowledge where great chiefs once resided and their bones still remain. The Fukumitsus are tossed into a world of complex real estate and judicial proceedings when nearby Kualoa Ranch, a large settler-owned corporation, destroys their familial burials to make way for continued development plans.


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Presented as Part Of Program 9 – Mothership II

Lyed Corn with Ash (Wa’kenenhstóhare’)

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2 min | Candace Maracle
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Seed Mother: Coming Home

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7 min | Rowen White, Mateo Hinojosa
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lii bufloo aen loo kishkishiw (buffalo wolf memory)

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5 min | Dianne Ouellette
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Our Ways

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9 min | Amanda Lickers (Seneca), Autumn Angelique Godwin (Cree)
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Chatham Islanders

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26 min | Kathleen Mantel | In person: Open Captions | Online: Closed Captions
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Salmon Reflection

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4 min | Anna Hoover
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The Politics of Toheroa Soup

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9 min | Tiana Trego Hall
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