Hawaiian Culture Essay

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Hawaiian Culture Aloha from the people of Hawaii and their culture! Have you ever wanted to visit Hawaii for fun activities, or to enjoy the amazing sights? Well, then Hawaii is a great travel destination! However, if you were to visit the islands, it would be great to learn a little about its people and culture! Luckily that’s exactly what we are going to talk about, so you can get to know the people of these magnificent islands a bit better. The culture of the native Hawaiian people is very colorful and unique because of its cuisine, hula dances, and religion. Now that we’re going to talk about culture, you should learn about one of the most important parts of any people’s way of life, their religion. The Hawaiians originally had a polytheistic …show more content…

It’s separated into two categories, Hula Kahiko and Hula Auana. Hula Kahiko is the ancient and traditional form of hula, while Hula Auana is the modern version. Hula Kahiko was a dance invented and used by the Hawaiians for the worship of their deities. Only the men were practitioners of hula in ancient times. They crafted instruments with animal skin, wood, and plants for the music such as drums made from shark-hide or gourds, rattles from bamboo, and rocks that clicked together for sound like castanets. The dance drastically changed from the 18 to 1900’s when the Americans gradually took control over the Hawaiian Islands and her people. When the missionaries arrived in Hawaii and began to convert the natives, they called hula as a lustful pagan dance. Soon after that, hula started to fade into obscurity, until the early 1900’s when foreigners from the around the globe started to visit Hawaii and the Hawaiian people traveled off the islands via steamship. A lot of people from different cultures began flooding into the Hawaiian archipelago, so the style of hula began to change. The Hawaiian people began to modify traditional hula with more and more western inspirations, and eventually, Hula Auana was created. The modern version of hula has significant differences from its traditional counterpart, but it was mostly in the …show more content…

Otherwise, your stomach would be growling until your next one after this! The Hawaiians have developed a unique diet of fish, shellfish, and edible plants. These foods include taro root, sugar cane, sweet potatoes, yams, a fish called mahimahi, and much more. The abundance of edible plants you can find in Hawaiian originally brought by the first Polynesian voyagers and settlers to arrive at Hawaii in ancient times. Later immigrants from Japan, Portugal, China, and The Philippines arrived in Hawaii during the 1800’s as laborers for the sugar plantations, and they brought food from their homeland too. This impacted the Hawaiians’ own cuisine because they started to add parts of the immigrants’ foods to their own like they did with hula. Soon, popular modern dishes were created, like malasadas, saimin, and spam. Malasadas are doughnuts covered in sugar that was inspired by Portuguese sweetbread. Saimin is noodles in a broth mixed with meat, vegetables, and seasoning, created when the Hawaiians were introduced to Asian forms of noodles. Finally, spam is canned meat that has grown very popular with the locals, particularly as spam musubi, a slice of the meat on a block of rice wrapped in seaweed called nori. Thank you for taking the time to read about the Hawaiians and their culture. I hope that you learned something new about this quaint island chain. If by any chance you’re going to visit Hawaii soon, I know you’d have a great time because

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