Ohana
Part of Hawaiian culture, ʻohana means family in an extended sense of the term, including blood-related, adoptive or intentional. It emphasizes that families are bound together and members must cooperate and remember one another. The term is cognate with (and its usage is similar to) the New Zealand Māori term whānau.
In actual Hawaiian culture the term ʻohana is strictly used for blood relations. Non-familial groupings always instead use the word "hui".
In Hawaiian, the word ʻohana begins with an ʻokina, indicating a glottal stop.
The root word ʻohā refers to the root or corm of the kalo, or taro plant (the staple "staff of life" in Hawaii), which Kanaka Maoli consider to be their cosmological ancestor.
In contemporary Hawaiian economic and regulatory practice, an "ʻohana unit" is a part of a house or a separate structure on the same lot that may contain a relative but which may not be rented to the general public.[1]
Ohana means family. Family means nobody gets left behind or forgotten.
Ohana is a key theme in Disney's 2002 film, Lilo & Stitch and the succeeding television series based on the film.
Sources
- Wight, K. 1997. Illustrated Hawaiian Dictionary, The Bess Press.
- City & County of Honolulu 2003. Land Use Ordinance
- Whitney, Scott 2001 Inventing 'Ohana Honolulu Magazine, September, 2001, pp. 42–45
References
- ^ www.takitaniconstruction.com/ohanazoning.html, honoluludpp.org/downloadpdf/zoning/lupdfaqs.pdf, www.honoluludpp.org/downloadpdf/construction/ohana.pdf