The US promised to return stolen lands to Native Hawaiians a century ago. Most are still waiting
by Claire Wang in Lahaina from US news | The Guardian on (#6HB6R)
The Maui wildfires illuminated the ongoing failures of the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act
On a one-acre farm at the foot of Maui's dormant Haleakal volcano, Kekoa Enomoto grows dragonfruit, pineapples, yuzu, avocado, kabocha squash and chilli peppers. She tends to a laying chicken, two honeybee hives and an aquaponics system that spawns Mexican oregano, lemongrass and tilapia.
As a beneficiary of the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, a century-old program to return Native Hawaiians to their ancestral lands, Enomoto, 77, pays just $600 a month in mortgage fees for the farm and three-bedroom house where she's lived for the past two decades. The average mortgage payment in Hawaii exceeds $2,500, the second-highest among all US states.
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