Lahaina, site of incalculable Native Hawaiian importance, reels from cultural losses
by Claire Wang from on (#6DVQS)
Residents hold on to hope for historic town that represents transformation' as it prepares to rebuild
A week after wildfires ripped through western Maui and killed at least 99 people, residents and historians are still processing the full scope of destruction in Lahaina, an 18th-century coastal town that was, for a time, the capital of the Hawaiian Kingdom.
Designated a national historic landmark in 1962, Lahaina is a place of incalculable importance for Native Hawaiians. In 1810, King Kamehameha I unified all the Hawaiian islands and made the town his royal residence for the next three decades.
Continue reading...