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"The Menehune" a Kauai Travel Page by spitball

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"The Menehune" a Kauai Travel Page by spitball
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spitball   
Canst Thou Not See It My Liege ?, Tis But Three Blocks North Of The Delicatessen ;)


Real Name: Randall Rand Ran-doll, Rangeet, I prefer anything but Randy, but I'll not get angry if YOU slip up.
Lives In: Vancouver, CA
Member Since: Nov 10, 2005
VT Rank: 1487

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spitball's Kauai Travelogues
Title [Click to view]Travel YearPictures
See where they shot which & What Film/sDecember, 2007 5
The MenehuneDecember, 2007 4
Pidgin Words & PhrasesDecember, 2007 1
Kilohana Plantation EstateDecember, 2007 8

Page Views: 25            Last Visit to Kauai: December, 2007      

The Menehune

by spitball - last update: Jan 5, 2008

Hawaii's little people

The folklore of many cultures around the world include stories of magical little people. Although most people easily recall the leprechauns of Ireland, in Hawaii the mischievous Menehune roam the deep forests at night.

Hawaii's legendary mystical and shy forest dwellers are small in size at about two feet high, although some are only six inches high and capable of fitting in the palm of someone's hand. According to legend they are very industrious master builders that use their great strength to accomplish mighty feats of engineering and construction overnight.

Many Hawaiian sources in recent years had suggested that the Menehune were indeed mythic creatures borne from the early period of the evolution of Hawaiian society. One explanation suggested that the Menehune were actually the first settlers of Hawai'i - descendants of the Marquesas islanders who were believed to have first occupied the Hawaiian Islands anywhere from 0 to 350 A.D. When the Tahitian invasion occurred about 1100 A.D., this theory goes, the first settlers were subdued by the physically larger Tahitians. Remnants of these earlier inhabitants of Hawaii would naturally then hide from the new invaders, occupying secret places in the valleys during the day, but scourging for food during the dark of night. Thus was born the legend of the little people of the Islands.

Historians believe that Menehune comes from the Tahitian Manahune, or commoner, and refers to a race of people who were small in social rather than physical stature.
Today, scholars speculate that the Menehune may not have been an imaginary race at all, but rather the descendants of the first wave of settlers who came to Hawaii from the Marquesas sometime around the sixth century. The Menehune legends come from later settlers who reached Hawaii six or seven hundred years later from the Islands of Tahiti, Scholars have concluded that this second wave of immigrants may have defeated the descendants of the original Marquesans, driving them north from the Big Island to Kauai, where they made their last stand. Only later did they emerge in their elfin guise. Linguistic support for the explanation comes from the Tahitian home islands where the word Manahune derisively refer to a class of workers and slaves.
And yet others have theorized that they believe the Menehune were tales made up by the ali'i to give explanation for the construction of fishponds, temples and other structures so that they wouldn't have to give credit to the real people who built these things - the maka'ainana - the common people.

While Hawaii's menehune legends are not limited to Kauai, the island certainly has its share of stories about these leprechaun - like people. Though generally considered to be creatures of myth, an 1820s census officially counted 65 Menehune's living in Wainiha Valley.

According to legend, the mystical Menehune, were credited as master builders capable of completing major projects in a single night. The Alekoko Fishpond and the Menehune Ditch, a aqua duct that funnels water for irrigation from the Waimea River, were both attributed to their over night efforts, cutting, transporting, and fitting stones for their projects in a fireman's bucket brigade. If they were discovered their work would have been abandoned. Luckily for the Hawaiians, the menehune were exceptionally good at remaining unnoticed.
A double row of Menehune extended 25 miles to distant Makweli on the west side, the workers passed stones hand-to-hand and built the fishpond for a princess and her brother. The Menehune were promised no one would observe them at work, which was carried on after dark. However, one night the royal pair snuck up and watched the thousands of Menehune at work, only to fall asleep. At sunrise the Menehune discovered them and turned them into twin stone pillars that can be seen today in the mountains above the fishpond wall. In the late 1800s Chinese workers filled the gaps to raise mullet.

The menehune enjoy dancing, singing, and archery. They have been known to use magic arrows to pierce the heart of angry people to ignite feelings of love instead. Menehune also enjoy cliff diving, so if you hear splashes in the night on the islands of Hawaii, it is highly possible a Menehune is diving into the ocean.

Whatever their origins, the menehune have emerged from the past as playful elves-pot-bellied, hairy, and muscular, with bushy eyebrows over large eyes and a short nose with a trace of the mischievousness of their European counterparts.

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spitball's Kauai Travelogues
Title [Click to view]Travel YearPictures
See where they shot which & What Film/sDecember, 2007 5
The MenehuneDecember, 2007 4
Pidgin Words & PhrasesDecember, 2007 1
Kilohana Plantation EstateDecember, 2007 8

Comments for spitball about Kauai
toonsarah Wed Apr 2, 2008 11:48 UTC
 Some really useful & interesting tips. Pidgin info fascinating. This looks like my sort of place - would especially love the helicopter flight
malianrob Tue Mar 4, 2008 03:51 UTC
 we must have been in Kauai around the same time.
Roadquill Sun Jan 6, 2008 03:05 UTC
 Good "toon" commentary and why I like Maui. good travels, Karl

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