A Hip Hop Anthology of Hawaiian History

A rich and engaging resource that teaches Hawaiʻi’s history via Hip hop, writing exercises, discussion prompts, recommended historical sources, and poetry. Recommended Ages 12 and up

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  • Hoʻokupu is a Hip Hop anthology of Hawaiian history is a Project from Hui o Kuapā and is led by Program Director, Maile Naehu. It is a collaborative project created by a masterful team of Hawaiian cultural historians, Hawaiʻi’s top MCs, teachers, Nā Hōkū Hanohano award-winning Hip hop artists, producers, and academic professors. This collaborative project can be used in learning environments as an engaging resource to teach Hawaiʻi’s history. As an initiative of education through arts and culture, we optimized this project by creating supplemental resources. This album is available on various musical platforms to download or stream. The Learner & Teacher Resource Guide features each song as a unit and includes a brief introduction, followed by the lyrics, writing and discussion prompts, and a poetry sample with a poetry prompt. The recommended list of sources provided can be used to supplement the content areas covered within the song. We are alchemizing the meaning of oral storytelling by telling our story in a truly traditional fashion blended with the highly influential modern catalysts for social change, Hip hop, education, and media. LISTEN NOW >>

Snag a hardcopy of the Hoʻokupu Learner and Teacher Resource Guide!

If you are interested in purchasing textbooks for your classroom please request an invoice with a detailed message to info@kahalehoaka.com. 

Ka Hale Hoaka is a preferred DOE vendor and also a Nohona Hawai’i vendor! This makes the procurement process faster and easier for Hawaii state DOE customers.

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About Hui o Kuapā

Hui o Kuapā (“HOK”) is a 501(C)(3) non-profit charitable organization founded in 1989 by communities on Molokaʻi to assist in the grassroots effort to restore the Molokaʻi fishponds back to productivity. The objective being to increase food production from both the loko iʻa and adjacent lands in order to feed and educate the community and serve as a model of a flourishing ahupuaʻa mauka a makai, empowering others to do the same. This is in alignment with Molokaʻi’s vision to become a model of self-sufficiency and a center for cultural knowledge and practices. We are training new generations of practitioners, leaders, and producers who can live the values of aloha ʻāina (love for the land) and kuleana (privilege and responsibility).

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