“The King Who United the Islands: My Connection to Kamehameha I”
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👑 The King We Grew Up With: Kamehameha I
Growing up in Hawaiʻi, you don’t just learn about King Kamehameha I — you feel his presence.
His statue stands tall and proud in Honolulu, draped in long golden robes, one arm reaching forward like he’s still guiding the islands. As a kid, I remember looking up at that statue and thinking, That’s our king. Not a fairy tale king. Not a Disney king. But a real one. A warrior. A unifier.
Before Kamehameha, the Hawaiian Islands were divided. Chiefs ruled their own lands, and there was conflict between islands. But through strength, vision, and strategy, he united Hawaiʻi in 1810 under one kingdom. That alone is powerful. Imagine separate islands, each proud and independent, finally standing together as one nation.
What always moved me most wasn’t just the battles he fought — it was the kind of leader he chose to become after the fighting stopped. He created the Law of the Splintered Paddle, a law that protected common people — fishermen, farmers, families — from harm. That tells you something about his heart. He wasn’t just conquering land. He was protecting his people.
As someone who grew up on islands, I understand that island life is special. It teaches you community. Respect. Connection to land and ocean. Kamehameha understood that, too. He wasn’t trying to erase identity — he was trying to strengthen it.
Now that I live far from tropical waters and palm trees, especially in cold seasons that feel nothing like home, I sometimes think about that warrior spirit. About resilience. About carrying your roots with you wherever you go.
King Kamehameha isn’t just a historical figure. For many of us, he represents unity, strength, and pride in who we are as island people.
And no matter how far I travel, that legacy travels with me. 🌺
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