Gabbard Delivers Message of Aloha at Honolulu Council Inauguration
At the invitation of the Honolulu City Council, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (HI-02) offered a keynote Message of Aloha at their inauguration ceremony on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019 at Honolulu Hale. *The full text of her remarks is below.
Before running for Congress, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard served on the Honolulu City Council from 2011-2012 representing District 6 (Makiki and Kalihi, Downtown Honolulu, Punchbowl, Liliha, Pauoa Valley, Nuʻuanu, ʻĀlewa Heights, Papakōlea, Kalihi Valley, Moanalua Gardens, Moanalua Valley, Hālawa Heights and Aiea Heights). Previous to that, she served from 2002-2004 in the Hawaiʻi State House of Representatives representing District 42 (Waipahu, ‘Ewa). At age 21, she was the youngest person elected to the House in Hawaiʻi.
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard’s Message of Aloha:
It’s a privilege to be back here at Honolulu Hale, where I had the honor of serving as one of your colleagues, representing District 6.
The opportunity to serve our community is a great one. As public servants, we have been charged with the responsibility of making decisions and taking action to positively impact the lives of others. To truly live aloha. This commitment to serve comes from aloha.
Living aloha is not something we can take for granted. It is a conscious choice that must be made. Every day. To stay focused and centered on our purpose.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ADARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ADAloha is most often used as hello and goodbye, but it’s real meaning is so much more than that. It is about being in the presence of and recognizing the breath of life – hā – in others.
Aloha is what binds us together — connected, united by our love for each other, our people and Hawaiʻi.
Our Queen Liliʻuokalani taught us that we must recognize this life, its mana, goodness, wisdom in others and in the world before saying aloha.
She said, “Life was everywhere – in the trees, the flowers, the ocean, the fish, the birds, the pili grass, the rainbow, the rock – in all the world was life–was God–was Aloha. Aloha in its gaiety, joy, happiness, abundance.
“Because of Aloha, one gave without thought of return; because of Aloha, one had mana. Aloha had its own mana. It never left the giver but flowed freely and continuously between giver and receiver.”
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD“Aloha could not be thoughtlessly or indiscriminately spoken, for it carried its own power. No Hawaiian could greet another with Aloha unless he felt it in his own heart. If he felt anger or hate in his heart he had to cleanse himself before he said Aloha.”
Aloha, love, is not just a feeling. It is a powerful force that motivates us to take action for the wellbeing of others and our country.
Divisiveness, hatred, bigotry and greed have cast a dark shadow over our country and so much of our politics. Aloha is what what our country and the world needs most now more than ever.
It is aloha that enables us to overcome the forces of darkness and greed seeking to tear us apart. To overcome the differences we have. To heal this nation, bring us together, and remind us that it is aloha that calls on us to fulfill our kuleana: aloha ʻāina for our land, aloha kai for our ocean and the waterways that lead to it, and aloha kanaka for our families, friends and neighbors.
As you weigh the difficult decisions that will come before you on the City Council, make those decisions within the context of aloha. Think through these challenges, work together, find ways to overcome differences to bring about solutions that best serve the interests of the people who entrusted us to work for them.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ADLead with aloha, compassion and kindness. Lead with the understanding that all of us — here on this island, across our state, and ultimately all of us on Island Earth are in the presence of and share the same hā – the same breath of life.
Aunty Pilahi Paki said in 1962, that “the world will turn to Hawaiʻi as they search for world peace, because Hawaiʻi has the key – and that key is aloha.”
Aloha teaches us to put service before self. Aloha reminds us that we are here as servants … working for the wellbeing of the people and of this special place we are fortunate to call home.
As we begin this new year, may we find inspiration, strength, compassion, and courage in the spirit of aloha which lies within each of our hearts, and share that aloha with others.