The Leaping Place of Souls

Ka’ena Point. “Named for a relative of the god Pele, the point is known as a leina-a-kaʻuhane, the leaping place of souls, where the spirits of the recently dead could be reunited with their ancestors.

“It’s still there, you can still see it,” says Laʻakea Perry, a respected kumu hula who takes guests at the Four Seasons Resort Oʻahu at Ko ʻOlina on a guided tour of the Kaʻena Point Natural Reserve. “When you walk there, it’s like going to somebody’s grave almost. You walk that path knowing that it’s the same path spirits travel to get to their final point. It’s very sacred.”

This area is also one of the last intact sand dune ecosystems in the main Hawaiian Islands and home to native coastal plants like the dwarf naupaka and ʻilima and seabirds, including wedge-tailed shearwaters, red-footed boobies and the majestic ʻiwa (great frigate bird). The reserve is a haven for the endangered Hawaiian monk seals and honu (Hawaiian green sea turtles), which can often be found resting along the coastline. During winter months, you can even see humpback whales offshore.

For the past few years, Perry has taken dozens of people—visitors and locals—on this 5-mile (roundtrip) trek along this rugged coastline, pointing out native plants and telling moʻolelo (stories) about the area. He explains that the Hawaiian name for nearby Yokohama Bay is Keawaʻula, which means “red harbor” in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi (Hawaiian language). It was called that because of the numerous brownish-reddish mūheʻe, or cuttlefish, that would congregate in the shallow waters here, making the water look red. (It’s now called Yokohama Bay after a Japanese fisherman who frequented the beach in the early 1900s.)”

https://www.hawaiimagazine.com/this-sacred-place-on-oahu…/

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *