Interior Department’s Office of Native Hawaiian Relations Awards $1 Million in NATIVE Act Grants to Native Hawaiian Organizations

09/09/2024
Last edited 09/09/2024

Date: Monday, September 9, 2024
Contact: Interior_Press@ios.doi.gov

HONOLULU — The Department of the Interior’s Office of Native Hawaiian Relations (ONHR) today announced the award of $1 million in grants to six Native Hawaiian Organizations (NHOs) to implement the Native American Tourism and Improving Visitor Experience (NATIVE) Act. Funding enables Indigenous communities to participate in national tourism goals and strategies while seeking to enhance and integrate native tourism, empower native communities, and expand unique cultural tourism opportunities. 

“NATIVE Act funding is critical to bolstering Indigenous heritage and cultural tourism opportunities, which also supports the socio-economic empowerment of the Native Hawaiian Community,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and Budget Joan Mooney. “We’re excited to partner with these six organizations in sharing cultural heritage across their communities and with all Americans.” 

The Hawaiian value of hōʻihi (respect), reflected in the ʻōlelo noʻeau (Hawaiian proverb), “E hōʻihi aku, e hōʻihi mai,” meaning “show respect, get respect,” represents the core principle of ONHR’s Heritage Opportunities in Hawaiʻi (HŌʻIHI) program. By showing respect, visitors can then be welcomed as guests with a shared kuleana (responsibility) to preserve the values and importance of Native Hawaiian traditional knowledge and cultural practices. 

Since 2021, ONHR has administered NATIVE Act funding for the Native Hawaiian Community. The HŌʻIHI program has supported visitor programs that showcase the heritage, places, art, foods, traditions, history and continuing vitality of the Native Hawaiian Community. 

“The HŌʻIHI grant puts Native Hawaiian culture and traditions at the forefront of Hawaiʻi’s tourism industry while providing opportunities to experience Hawaii's natural and cultural resources to foster appreciation,” said Keala Fukuda, HŌʻIHI Grant Manager with the Office of Native Hawaiian Relations. “This year’s awardees are great examples of Hawaiʻi’s overall shift towards regenerative tourism.”

The six NHOs awarded HŌʻIHI grants in 2024 are:

NHO: Hawaiʻi Island Land Trust 

Project: Mahukona Navigation and Ecological Complex to support the creation of an 'āina-based education curriculum specific to Mahukona, provide educational programs to students, guide hands-on restoration activities, and offer educational hikes for the community. 

NHO: Hui Makaʻāinana o Makana 

Project: Maliu Mai a Pono: Balance-making in Hāʻena State Park to support visitor engagement and resource management in Hāʻena State Park. 

NHO: Koa ʻIke 

Project: Hoʻolakou Ia Kakou economic development program for Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners and small business owners. 

NHO: Kumano I Ke Ala O Makaweli 

Project: Kulāiwi Connection Project to restore native forests and food systems in Makaweli, Kauaʻi. 

NHO: Mana Maoli 

Project: Mana ʻIke Kuʻuna: The Power of Traditional Knowledge project using music and media to educate and connect community and ʻōpio to cultural practices. 

NHO: Native Hawaiian Hospitality Association 

Project: Hoʻokipa Hawaiʻi project to showcase the knowledge of practitioners and entrepreneurs and provide professional development to Native Hawaiian Organizations through a certificate course culminating in a two-day showcase in Waikiki. 

For more information about the HŌʻIHI Grant Program and ONHR, please visit ONHR’s website

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