Palestinians and Kanaka Maoli both believe in love of the land. Gabriele Holtermann-Gorden SIPA

During my recent trip to Hawaiʻi, I found many similarities between its native people – Kanaka Maoli – and Palestinians.

Both of us share the concept of Aloha ʻĀina, which is translated as “love for the land.”

Kanaka Maoli have great respect for all the natural elements, while many continue to revere the deities associated with them. They work hard to protect the environment.

The earth mother is a Kanaka Maoli deity. The land is, therefore, replete with spiritual significance; it is a provider of nutrition and life.

It is not a commodity to be bought and sold.

Like Palestinians, Kanaka Maoli describe farmers as “salt of the earth.”

And, like Palestinians, Kanaka Maoli are also struggling to survive on their land.

I had an opportunity to visit the protectors – or kia’ʻi – of Mauna Kea, a Hawaiian mountain regarded as sacred by many indigenous people. There, hundreds of Kanaka Maoli – along with their non-indigenous allies – are taking part in a blockade aimed at stopping the Thirty Meter Telescope project.

Desecration

As its title suggests, the $1.6 billion scheme involves the building of a massive space observation center. The opponents of this project regard it as an act of desecration in an ancient burial ground.

When I went to see participants in the blockade, I was reminded of how a Palestinian woman hugged an olive tree during the second intifada – to try and stop Israel from destroying it.

There is arguably more awareness in Hawaiʻi about indigenous struggles taking place around the world than in any other US state.

The Palestinian flag flies next to flags of other indigenous peoples in the camp erected by the kia’ʻi at the base of Mauna Kea. Its presence is a clear expression of solidarity toward Palestine from Kanaka Maoli.

A delegation from the Palestinian Youth Movement visited Hawaiʻi last month. Some Kanaka Maoli accepted an invitation to come to Palestine so they can witness our plight firsthand.

The indigenous Hawaiians with whom I spoke had a strong sense of humor.

One Kanaka Maoli man who visited Palestine told me that he showed the movie Born in Gaza to a comrade of his, who had voiced anger at state policy towards Hawaiians. This prompted his comrade to “stop complaining,” the man said.

When I met Kanaka Maoli, I saw them as Palestinians.

I saw them as Palestinians standing up to prevent the demolition of their homes in occupied Jerusalem.

I saw them as Gaza’s people continuing to participate in the Great March of Return despite all the deaths and injuries inflicted by Israel.

Drawing strength from each other

Palestine and Hawaiʻi have similar histories.

In the 18th century, Daher al-Umar founded what has been described as “an autonomous Arab homeland in Palestine.”

Toward the end of that century, steps were taken toward unifying the Hawaiian Islands. That led to the establishment of a Hawaiian kingdom.

In the cases of both Palestinians and Kanaka Maoli, efforts to achieve independence have been thwarted by colonization.

The Hawaiian Islands were annexed by the US government in 1898. The annexation was illegal under international law.

Though still part of the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was effectively promised to the Zionist movement by Arthur James Balfour, Britain’s foreign secretary at the time, in 1917. Britain took over the administration of Palestine following World War I.

Britain’s brutality toward Palestinians – including the suppression of revolts – enabled the ethnic cleansing carried out by Zionist forces in the 1940s. That ethnic cleansing – known to Palestinians as the Nakba or catastrophe – resulted in Israel’s establishment.

Israel oppresses Palestinians every day, but we have not given up our struggle.

There are clear parallels between our steadfastness and that of Kanaka Maoli.

If there is one lesson that can be learned from both Hawaiʻi and Palestine, it is that it is possible to challenge colonization through unarmed resistance.

The protest at the base of Mauna Kea is still going strong – more than five months after it began.

This effort can be compared to the popular resistance against Israel’s settlement activities and the construction of its apartheid wall in the West Bank. And it can be compared to how the Great March of Return has put the spotlight on how Israel has kept Gaza under siege for more than a decade.

International solidarity is even more vital for indigenous peoples. We must stand together and draw strength from each other.

That is how we demonstrate our shared love of the land.

Yousef M. Aljamal is a writer from Gaza. Twitter: @YousefAljamal.

Editor’s note: Some changes have been made to this article following publication. A reference to the imprisonment of an indigenous Hawaiian queen has been removed.