Kekuhi Kealiʻikanakaʻole is the Coordinator for the Center for Hawai’i Life Styles, UH Hilo. She’s an award winning singer, and a kumu hula, the eighth generation with Halau o Kekuhi, which bases its style of hula on the forces of Pele and her sister, Hiʻiaka. HPR’s Noe Tanigawa reports, Kealiʻikanakaʻole offers a different perspective on the current Kilauea eruption.

Kumu Hula Kekuhi Keali'ikanaka'ole discusses manifestations of Pele and a different way to approach the Kilauea eruption.

Kekuhi Keali'ikanaka'ole goes into more detail about the physical effects of Pele's activity, and into the story and significance of Hi'iakaikapoliopele.

Kumu Hula Kekuhi Kealiʻikanakaʻole says these days, the air is humid and warm. Above, there are clouds that look like birds.

“You wake up in the morning with sulfur on your tongue. It’s enlivening in the body, very sensually, using all the senses.”

Kealiʻikanakaʻole says, aside from obvious disruptions, there may be a reason if people are feeling extra nervous or excitable.

Kealiʻikanakaʻole: There’s a quickening of energetics. There’s another force that the Pele is very responsible for and that is the magnetic force of the earth. It's magnetic and we forget because we cannot see that force, all we can know is what’s in our vision. But there’s another force the Pele is very responsible for and that’s the magnetic force of the earth. We feel that. Or I hope we feel that.

I would think we would, but nobody’s talked about it. What do you mean by “the Pele”?

Kealiʻikanakaʻole: I’m talking about the Pele as the element. Her primary form is lava, magma. And so when we think about the goddess, we don’t think about an extra form outside of that. We see the form that we’re seeing today on the news feeds or Facebook feeds. That’s it! She’s right there!!

Kealiʻikanakaʻole: It’s creation right in the front of our faces. If we want to think of anything close to that, watch the birth of your child, watch the birth of your friend’s child. I think that’s the closest we can get to that form of Pele as a divinity. The goddess is an energy. The goddess is a resource.

Kealiʻikanakaʻole: We know the island is still going to produce new land for a loooong time. That’s why, reframe the way we’re thinking about the activity that’s happening right now, reframe it! It’s not a destruction. It’s a creation.

Kealiʻikanakaʻole: We don't even know when this is going to happen again, and of course we grieve the loss of houses and things, but just re-frame our community’s orientation to what it is that's really happening. Look! We’re living right here and we’re going to have stories to tell for the next one hundred years.

Kealiʻikanakaʻole: Stories that we read in the Pele and Hi’iaka books now, those are the things that were happening in front of people’s eyes. So what do we do? Let’s write it down, let’s journal it, you guys. Everybody who has the opportunity to pick ash up from their windshield and go Oh my God, this was just made, and it just popped out of the earth not ten minutes ago. Write it down! Be the community geophysicist so that we have stories for our great grandchildren for the next 100 years. That's the benefit.

Part two with Kekuhi Kealiʻikanakaʻole continues, Connecting With the Pele, see below. The full interview, above, is highly recommended.