Wednesday, January 26, 2011

KUKANILOKO BIRTHING STONES, WAHIAWA, OAHU:

Kukaniloko Birthing Stones, Wahiawa, Oahu.
Photo: October 26, 2010, Peter Faris.

Located a little north of the old royal city of Wahiawa, Oahu, the Kukaniloko Birthing Stones are a vestige of the old ways, still apparently honored as indicated by the presence of offerings placed upon some of the stones. Kukaniloko was a place of great mana, and it was reportedly customary for pregnant women from the ruling families to come to the site to have their baby lying upon one of the stones in the belief that it will gain great mana from that. The stones are found in a grove of palm trees surrounded by fields of sugar cane and was once part of the Dole pineapple plantation.



Offerings on stones, Kukaniloko Birthing Stones, Wahiawa,
Oahu. Photo: October 26, 2010, Peter Faris.

According to Van James, “this is the first ancient site on Oahu to have been officially recognized, preserved, and protected, thanks to the efforts of the Daughters of Hawaii in 1925.” “The site is believed to have been established by chief Nanakaoko and his wife Kahihiokalani. The efficacy of the stones was attributed to aumakua residing in them.” (2010: 113) “In Hawaiian mythology, an ʻaumakua is a family god, often a deified ancestor. The Hawaiian plural of ʻaumakua is nā ʻaumākua, although in English the plural is usually ʻaumakuas. Nā ʻaumākua frequently manifested as animals such as sharks or owls. Nā ʻaumākua were worshipped at localities (often rocks) where they were believed to "dwell".” (Wikipedia 2010)


Engraving on top of rock. Kukaniloko Birthing Stones,
Wahiawa, Oahu.Photo: October 26, 2010, Peter Faris.
Shadows cast on the engraving on top of the rock.Kukaniloko
Birthing Stones, Wahiawa, Oahu. Van James, Ancient Sites of O’ahu:
Revised Edition, Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu, 2010, p. 114.

Few of these stones have recognizable petroglyphs although many of them seem to be shaped in ways that suggest that they have been worked. Many of them bear hollows like basins that may have been used for sacrifices or divination rituals. Others have channels in the surface like drains, and one extreme stone has a large number of rounded vertical projections around the upper rim. Although to the casual viewer’s eye there are no tool marks on these they seem too extreme to not suspect purposeful working. This stone also has the most obvious petroglyph on its upper surface, four concentric circles. With a low sun, at certain times of the year, some of the projections cast shadows across the petroglyph which has prompted suggestions that this has calendrical significance.

Piko stone, Kukaniloko Birthing Stones, Wahiawa,
Oahu. Photo: October 26, 2010, Peter Faris.

Another stone that has obvious working is identified as a piko stone. A stone into which a number of small pits has been pecked. These were reportedly intended as repositories for the umbilical cords (piko) of children born at Kukaniloko, and Kukaniloko is identified as the piko (navel) of Oahu.

A number of lei offerings on the stones at the time of our visit testify to the continued relevance of this site to the beliefs of some people.

References:

James, Van
2010 Ancient Sites of O’ahu: Revised Edition, Bishop Museum Press, Honolulu.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aumakua

1 comment:

  1. YOUR INFORMATION IS INCORRECT! IN YOUR 30 YEARS OF STUDIES THAT YOU DEFEND, YOU SHOULD HAVE SPOKEN WITH THE FAMILY OF THE LAND THAT PRESERVES AND PERPETUATES OUR MO`OLELO - TRADITIONAL COMPREHENSION. YOU HAVE ERRONEOUSLY LABELED THE PIKO STONE. SO FOR THE PAST FOUR YEARS PEOPLE HAVE BEEN MISLEAD TO BELIEVE YOUR INFORMATION IS TRUE AND CORRECT WHEN YOUR SOURCE IS SOMEONE ELSE WHO DID NOT BOTHER TO SEEK THE TRUTH. SUCH A SHAME THAT YOU THINK YOU CAN TELL OUR STORY. THE BOTTOM JUST DROPPED OUT OF YOUR CREDIBILITY FOR ALL THINGS YOU ATTEMPT TO DO.

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