May Day is Lei Day in Hawai`i
http://hawaiianlanguage.com/mayday.html

 

 

May 1st

"...May Day is Lei Day in Hawai`i
Garlands of flowers ev'rywhere,
All of the colors in the rainbow
Maidens with blossoms in their hair
Flowers that mean we should be happy,
Throwing aside a load of care,
Oh, May Day is Lei Day in Hawai`i
Lei Day is happy day out there."
~ Red Hawke, 1928

May 1st marks ka lâ hânau (the birthday) of The Hula Pages, an auspiciously appropriate day, as this day holds special and sentimental hula significance for every keiki o ka `âina (child of the land).


Source of Photo: Unknown. If known to you, please e-mail.
Credit will be gratefully cited and linked.

For those blessed with a childhood in Hawai`i, there was no finer or more festive day of Hawaiian celebration. For this Aunty's home village in Puna on the Big Island, The May Day Pageant, held at the school, was a far bigger event than the Christmas Program, which came in second, a distant second. May Day was not, and still is not, an official Hawaiian holiday, but villagers took off work anyway, whether they had kids in school or not. It was a day that drew us together like a powerful magnet. We came together as a community in celebration and remembrance of our cultural heritage and diversity.

This page was created for all who find their way here, but especially written for those who must be away from the `âina (literally, the land; figuratively, Hawai`i). As your own unique memories flow through your consciousness , may the vivid remembrance of the sights, sounds, fragrances and The Aloha Spirit of this special day permeate your every sense:

Remember the excitement and giddy anticipation leading up to May Day? The hours of dance practice, coaxing awkward hands and clumsy feet into graceful movements... preparing the costumes... gently picking flowers and stringing them into lei to express Aloha to loved ones, physically here and departed, kumu (teachers) and for the all-important May Day performance by each class...
Remember going to school decked out in lei, wearing brightly-colored mu`umu`u and Aloha shirts? Kids "oohing-and-ahhing" over each other's delectable lei of candy, packs of chewing gum and cracked seed, individually wrapped in colored cellophane tied together with curly ribbon… lei being pulled apart and treats being exchanged and consumed, spinning each kid out to lofty sugar highs... presenting lei to kumu with sticky hands and even stickier kisses, and soon the top of kumu's head was barely seen above the crush of lei...
Remember wriggling into dance costumes and the last-minute rehearsals and jitters? A bit of nail-biting, some hand-holding, and a whole lot of fidgeting... the entire community coming together for the May Day school pageant, lei contest, games and food... waving to all the smiling Aunties and Uncles, as you filed in with your class…
Remember that standing-room-only crowd, but there was no rudeness, no unruliness, no jostling, just smiles and kû ka paila (heaps of) Aloha Spirit... squeezing closer and tighter to fit one more Aunty's `elemu (buttocks), or gladly giving up a coveted seat for a tûtû (grandparent) or mama with bêbê (baby)… EVERY person donning their best Hawaiian finery: mu`umu`u or Aloha shirt, lauhala hats (plaited hats of the hala leaves) encircled with lei hulu (feather lei), Hawaiian bracelets, flowers, be it a single pua melia over the ear or a hugely elaborate floral arrangement in the hair, and lei, lei, lei... "garlands of flowers everywhere…"
Remember the intermingled a`ala (fragrances) of pua melia (plumeria), ginger blossoms, gardenia, maile? Ambrosia for the ihu (nose).
Remember the strumming of `ukulele and guitars and the falsetto singing revving up the bustling crowd… then, the (conch shell) blower came running down the aisle, pausing to trumpet the festivities to come... an instant hush would come over the crowd... and necks would crane to get the first peek of the May Day mô`î wahine (queen) and mô`î kâne (king) and their court... first, the princesses, resplendent in holokû (formal Hawaiian dresses) and knee-length lei of the islands they represent and the princes in their malo (loincloths) and `ahu (capes), carrying kâhili (standards) marched in...
Remember feeling the lump-in-the-throat pride -- and for our tûtû, the wistful nostalgia of times past-- when the beautiful May Day mô`î wahine and the handsome mô`î kâne, who, representing the dignity, beauty and goodness of our people and culture, stepped forward? A thousand admiring glances, the population of this Aunty's village in the 1950's, kept pace with every regal step taken down the aisle and up to their flower-bedecked thrones…
And remember the hula? Ahh, the HULA

Animated graphic: courtesy of Aston Hotels & Resorts
Welcome to The Hula Pages
and Mahalo for Celebrating Its Birthday with us!

>> Click here to share your May Day recollections (what dances you danced, your favorite lei, etc.) and mana`o hula (thoughts on hula): HULA COMMUNITY PAGE

Choice sites and images to help sustain your May Day reverie:

 
Ka A`o Loko - Inspiration

May Your Life Brilliantly Shine with the Light of The Aloha Spirit!

>> Click here: IF YOU LIKE THIS SITE
Home: The Hula Pages | Table of Contents | Welcome | Mahalo to Aunty Mary Kawena Pukui | Hula Proverbs | Chant | Basic Hula Words | Different Types of Hula | Hula Styles & Steps | Hula Implements | Hawaiian Musical Instruments | Hula Dress & Accessories | Greenery for the Hula Altar | Hula Reflections | Hula Lyrics | Legends | Ka Lokomaika`i | Hula-Related Links | Merrie Monarch Links | E Hula Mau Links | Nâ Kumu Hula | Pronunciation Guide | SEARCH | HULA COMMUNITY PAGE | the hawaiian page: a browser-opener

The Hawaiian Language: Ka `Ôlelo Hawai`i
Site URL: http://hawaiianlanguage.com
HL home | why | what's new | table of contents | word lists | leilani's lânai | links | language links | help | aloha notes nâ `ânela kelekî | pronunciation guide | the aloha spirit | EMERGENCY Dog Links | the hawaiian page: a browser-opener

Disclaimer
© 1999