Hoʻokipa Hawaiʻi Weekend

A two-day community and culture event

February 3 & 4, 2024

At the Royal Hawaiian Center

Hoʻokipa - to host; to be hosted

Hoʻokipa Hawaiʻi Weekend is a two-day family-friendly event dedicated to the inclusion of Hawaiian culture and knowledge systems through the medium of Hawaiian cultural practitioners, exhibits, demonstrations and vendors that engages community and visitors in a greater understanding and appreciation for the Native Hawaiian culture and Hawaiʻi.

Demonstrations

While visitors and the larger community are becoming familiar with Native Hawaiian value systems, there is need for the extension of these concepts to be expressed and demonstrated through hands-on authentic and respectful reciprocal exchanges with Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners themselves and with a calling for community engagement.

This family-friendly free event will provide Cultural Practitioners and visitors a level platform and facilitated space for demonstrations, exhibitions and information exchange spaces, in a safe and mutually beneficial way to share cultural knowledge and education.

Cultural Practitioners confirmed for the event include:

Lauhala (pandanas) weaving, kapa (barkcloth) making, kōnane (a game of strategy), nā mea kaua (weaponry), nā mea makua (fishing), hōlua (sledding), loko iʻa (fishponds), flower lei making , nā wai hoʻoluʻu (natural dye making), kilo hōkū (celestial observations), hulu (featherwork), pūpū o Niʻihau (Niʻihau shell) lei making, ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian language), ʻohe kapala (stamping), mea kanu Hawaiʻi (native plants), pahu (drum) making, and much more!

Regenerative Tourism extends sustainable tourism to address the primary core needs of the community ensuring that benefits are circulated back into the community in a just and reciprocal manner. For a visitor, understanding where their dollar goes when they spend it, is a critical element of responsible visiting.

Kuhikuhi Marketplace is a vendor (mākeke) marketplace event that is specific to Native Hawaiian-owned small businesses that have a product or service that aligns with NaHHA’s mission and fundamentals. NaHHA includes the Kuhikuhi Marketplace as an element of many of NaHHA’s public facing events. Vendors who will be showcased here, have been vetted by NaHHA to ensure that their products and services speak to the ideals of regeneration. Many vendors will be graduates of NaHHA's Pākōlea program which focuses on removing the barriers for Native Hawaiian-owned small businesses to gain access to the industry and land their products on the shelves of the industry for visitor consumption with local goods and services that are sustainable, socially responsible and culturally appropriate while keeping local business capital gains continuously circulating in the Hawaiʻi economy.

The Kuhikuhi Marketplace grows these opportunities to ensure local small businesses are engaged in tourism and that this interaction provides economic benefit to local families and reduces capital flight.

On-stage Activities

This event will feature TWO STAGES; Center Stage at Helumoa and a second stage we are building out on the 4th floor at Ka Lewa Lānai.

Center stage at Helumoa activities

Center stage on the ground floor of Helumoa will include daily cultural music and mele by the Kawika Trask Trio featuring 'Iwalani Hoʻo Apo, Jeffrey Auhoy, Dwight Kanae, Nick Masagatani, Josei Alfonci, and cultural storytelling by Lopaka Kapanui.

Activities include hula exhibition by keiki hula hālau featuring Ka Pā Hula O Nā Liko O Kalanialoha under the direction of Kumu Hula - Anuhea Borengasser on February 3rd and Hālau Nā Mamo O Kealamailani under the direction of Kumu Hula - Tehani Gonzado on February 4th.

There will be panel discussions in collaboration with the University of Hawaiʻi - West Oʻahu with professors and with cultural practitioners from the Native Hawaiian community on topics focused on our ancestral and modern relationships and interactions with the ‘āina (land) and water; both kai (salt water) and wai (fresh water). Topics will cover food sustainability and agriculture, protection of indigenous knowledge, health and healing, ocean recreation, and other cultural practices. We will also feature over 15 cultural demonstration booths that will fill the ground floor in and around the Royal Grove. 

4th Floor stage at Ka Lewa Lānai activities

Ka Lewa Lānai stage on the 4th floor of Royal Hawaiian Center will include hula demonstrations by Merrie Monarch award winning hālau, Ke Kai O Kahiki under the direction of Kumu Hula - Laʻakea Perry, Hawaiian language learning, on stage cultural demonstrations, the Nakeʻu Awai Designs Fashion Showcase, Nā Hōkū Hanohano award winning entertainment Mark YamanakaKala’e Camarillo & Anthony Pfluke. We will also feature 60+ Native Hawaiian vendors, food booths, and a 21 and over experience in the Poi & Palaka Lounge, with beer, wine and spirits as well as a selection of specialty spirits made right here in Hawaiʻi!

This event is proudly supported through a Hōʻihi Grant offered by the Office of Native Hawaiian Relations through Native Act Funding.

Center Stage activities are supported through an ʻAhahui Grant offered by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.

NaHHA values these relationships and honors both organizations for its commitment to authentic Native Hawaiian cultural representation and its support of Native Hawaiian small business & community.

Special Kamaʻāina Room Rate Packages are available from our hotel partners using the following links

Overflow Parking Options

Waikīkī Parking Garage

333 Seaside Avenue

Open 24/7

No oversized vehicles

Height Restriction Maximum: 6ʻ4”

Special Rates:

  • Early Bird: $10 In by 5:30a-9:00am out by 5:00p 

  • Daily Special: $15 in by 5:30a-9am for a max of 9hrs (hourly rate apply thereafter)

Regular Hourly rates: $3 every 30 minutes or fraction thereof

Lost Ticket Fee: $45

Completely Cashless – Credit Card Payment Only

Waikīkī Galaria Tower Parking Garage

2222 Kalākaua Avenue

Open 24/7

No oversized vehicles

Height Restriction Maximum: 6ʻ4”

Opens at:  6am and closes at 9pm

Hourly rate ONLY: $4 every 30 minutes or fraction thereof

Lost Ticket Fee: $40

Completely Cashless – Credit Card Payment Only

MAHALO TO OUR SPONSORS

Native Hawaiian cultural values such as mālama ʻāina and kuleana standout amongst the world, and alongside aloha are branching into truly global ‘mainstream’ terms that require a direct response from the Native Hawaiian community as to the best practices on how to express them and put them into action.

— Mālia Sanders, Executive Director of NaHHA