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Speaking clearly and calmly, Ka’iulani addressed the press, “Seventy years ago, Christian America sent over Christian men and women to give religion and civilization to Hawaii. Today three of the sons of those missionaries are at your capitol, asking you to undo their fathers’ work… I, a poor, weak girl, with not one of my people near me and all of these statesmen against me, have the strength to stand up for the rights of my people. Even now I can hear their wail in my heart, and it gives me strength.”
From New York, she proceeded to Washington D.C “She was invited to the White House and met with the President and his wife,” says Sharon Linnea, author of Princess Ka’iulani: Hope of a Nation, Heart of a People. “No one else had been able to accomplish that.” The story of Kaiulani’s advocacy for her people was also widely covered in women’s magazines of the time. “I think that was the way she won the hearts and minds of the American people,” says Linnea. “She made [readers] understand the situation, and what was at stake in the Hawaiian Islands that they hadn’t understood before.”
Shortly after Ka’iulani’s arrival in America, and a few days into his new administration, President Grover Cleveland ordered the Senate to remove the annexation treaty from consideration, and dispatched James H. Blount, former chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, to the Islands to investigate the situation. Over a period of months, Blount conducted a thorough inquiry: his report was unequivocally critical of the takeover, and recommended that the Queen be restored to her throne.
When Cleveland ordered the provisional government to return power to the Queen, they refused. Unwilling to order the use of force, Cleveland appealed to Congress to demand that the new government cease what he called “lawless occupation…under false pretenses.” But he was unable to stop the tide. He served only one term, and his successor, President McKinley, was an annexationist. In 1898, the same year the U.S. gained control of Cuba, the Philippines, Guam and Puerto Rico, the annexation of Hawaii was enacted. Cleveland later wrote, “I am ashamed of the whole affair.”
Ka’iulani, who by then had returned to Hawaii from her long exile abroad, spent the day of annexation quietly, in the somber company of her aunt and other members and friends of the royal family. For most Hawaiians it was a day of mourning. The Hawaiian Gazette reported details of the ceremony held at Iolani Palace where the Hawaiian national anthem was being played “minus the 16 native [musicians] who were excused… all of them so overcome by events that they retired and would not play… before the lowering [of the Hawaiian flag].”
With battle for their people’s independence lost, Ka’iulani and Lili’uokalani turned their efforts toward voting rights for the Hawaiian people. When President McKinley sent a delegation of commissioners to the islands, Ka’iulani invited them to a lavish, grand luau at Ainahau. “She made sure that they were seated between obviously very well-educated Hawaiians who were nothing like what they had been led to believe Hawaiians were like,” Linnea explains. “And once they had actually met Hawaiian people they could no longer pretend that [Hawaiians] did not deserve to vote as much as anyone else.”
In January of 1899, she became ill after riding her horse in a storm, and never fully recovered. She died on March 6, 1899, at the age of 23.
“All of us can’t help but feel the poignancy of what could have been achieved but never was,” Brown says. And yet, what Ka’iulani was able to achieve was significant. “The fact that it took as long as it did for the U.S. to take over the country I think was very much due to Ka’iulani and her ability to sway not only politicians but the public,” says Linnea. “She had a gift for influencing public opinion and for using her personal experience to change the hearts of people who were in power and had the ability to make decisions.”


Comments
Thank you to Janet Hulstrand and The Smithsonian for focusing on Ka'iulani's accomplishments, as her courageous efforts for Hawaii are so often overlooked or misinterpreted. Jennifer Fahrni, The Princess Ka'iulani Project
Posted by Jennifer Fahrni on May 15,2009 | 05:31PM
Thank you for this article. I am planning a trip to Hawaii in September, and this provides much background information about its history. I always enjoy reading the monthly issues.
Posted by Mary Lofquist on July 1,2009 | 08:20PM
I read this essay as part of a communications class. I have been to Hawaii and that is why your article caught my eye. This article helped fill in the details of the story. It is truely a shame what the United States did to Hawaii. We should have let them maintain their government. Why do we always think if things are not our way they are not the right way? It would be nice to think we would learn from our history, but alas we are destined to repeat it. Wonderful, well-written article. Thank you.
Posted by Teri Synovec on August 4,2009 | 12:54PM
Mahalo, Janet for the great article!
Having been immersed in Hawaiian history for almost 20 years now, I am constantly amazed at how little the 'western' world knows or understands about Hawai'i or Polynesia. Currently, I'm working on the first of a historical fiction trilogy on the Hawaiian story and writing about Ka'iulani's ancestors! Hawaiians/Polynesians were some of the finest navigators in the world, were "green" long before western culture even thought about it. They did aqua culture with fish ponds, were careful about fishing in certain seasons to make sure they didn't deplete their resources and with no 'goods' coming in from anywhere else, were able to have a thriving society that supported close to a million people! It was that last hundred years or so after western contact that devastated their culture far more than any of the inter-island wars and Ka'iulani was among a small group that tried valiantly to try to save their island home. Thank you so much for your article and your work that opens windows of understanding into the complex history of Hawai'i!
Posted by Robyn Eastman on October 4,2009 | 09:53AM
Princess Ka'iulani did what any young princess would do under similar circumstances -- she tried to protect her birthright to inherit a kingdom. So far as I know, that failed effort was her only "accomplishment."
But today the memory of her is used as a political weapon to seek race-based political sovereignty for ethnic Hawaiians. Please see the book "Hawaiian Apartheid: Racial Separatism and Ethnic Nationalism in the Aloha State" at
http://tinyurl.com/2a9fqa
Posted by Ken Conklin on October 4,2009 | 05:04PM
I will always have to use her skills on my country. Never give up.
Posted by anonymous princess on October 25,2009 | 09:22PM
There is nothing "race-based" About Hawaii's sovereignty. the racial composite of Hawaiian Nationals Are intermingled with the origins of the many immigrants that settled in Hawaii.(A true melting pot long before America emerged). Today we carry on that tradition and Include the many descendants of non-Kanaka Maoli (non Native Hawaiian) Nationals in the nation RE-building proses. The sovereignty of Hawaii still exists, a recognized Governing Body is in the Proses of being chosen. At witch time a change of land-lordship will be sought. This an Ugly chapter in American history, one that I would think every American would support rectifying. If all the facts were known! www.freehawaii.info
Posted by A Hawaiian on October 30,2009 | 01:09PM