Hawaiian Monarch Quotes

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The status of domestic dependent nation that would be granted Native Hawaiians through a process of federal recognition does not recognize the kingdom's history of sovereign existence or take into account the unjust occupation or overthrow of the monarch inflicted by the U.S. government. At the same time, relying on presently existing international law regarding Indigenous Peoples also has the limitation that in tis present state such law still gives priority to existing nation-states and puts the preexisting rights of Indigenous People as nations on a back burner.
J. Kēhaulani Kauanui (Paradoxes of Hawaiian Sovereignty: Land, Sex, and the Colonial Politics of State Nationalism)
Critics of Afrocentrism can recognize the facial features in a police sketch as belonging to a Black man, but when these features appear on the face of a Hawaiian monarch, or on that of a pharaoh, the identity of this royalty becomes subject to all manner of esoteric hair splitting
Ishmael Reed
ʻIolani Palace also stands in equally strong rebuttal to the notion that the will of Hawaiʻi's Kings and Queens was simply overborne by outsiders. Hawaiʻi's Monarchs from King Kamehameha I on worked diligently and often brilliantly to find the path to draw together traditional Hawaiian culture and values and the forces of Westernization and modernization spreading across the world. This was not an easy path, for there was no model to follow. Each monarch in his or her way remained true to their land and their people. If you look closely and listen carefully, the Palace itself speaks to that path. That it was ultimately force of arms that brought the journey of modern Hawaiian Kingdom to an end makes it a tragedy and not a denial of honor, integrity, and achievements of that journey.
Carol Maxym (ʻIolani Palace: A Metaphor for Two Centuries of Hawaiʻi History)
From the beginning, Cleveland had recognized Hawaii as an independent nation. During his first term as President, he carefully and deliberately obtained permission from the Hawaiian monarch, before establishing a naval base and coaling station in Oahu’s Pearl Harbor.
Jeffrey K. Smith (Grover Cleveland: The Last Conservative Democratic President)