News
conference re Doe v Kamehameha hearing
Statement by Nainoa Thompson
Chairman, Board of Trustees
October
16, 2004
Aloha mai kakou. Thank you for joining us this
afternoon.
My name is Nainoa Thompson and I am the chairman
of the Board of Trustees of Kamehameha Schools, and I am speaking
on behalf of the full board.
I would also like to thank everyone standing
here with us. They reflect Hawaii’s broader community
in support of Kamehameha Schools, its mission and its purpose
to educate native Hawaiian children. The trustees, CEO, Dr.
Chun and the entire Kamehameha Schools ‘ohana greatly
appreciate that you have given up your time today to stand
with us as we make this very important announcement.
We are announcing today that the date has been
set to hear the appeal of our case in the John Doe v. Kamehameha
Schools lawsuit challenging Kamehameha’s policy of giving
preference in admissions to applicants of native Hawaiian
ancestry.
The date has been set for Thursday, November
4, 2004, and it will be heard here in Hawai’i. The hearing
venue is scheduled to be the Moot Court classroom at the William
S. Richardson School of Law at the University of Hawaii.
Kamehameha Schools will argue that the appeals
court should uphold the ruling issued by Federal Judge Alan
Kay last November and let our preference policy stand.
Judge Kay noted that Kamehameha’s history
and mission are unique, and that Kamehameha Schools is a private
institution – we do not accept any federal money. Judge
Kay also affirmed that Kamehameha Schools’ mission parallels
a recognized need for educational remediation for Hawaiians
that has been affirmed by Congress.
Finally, Judge Kay acknowledged that Kamehameha
Schools exists to correct the social imbalances Hawaiians
continue to suffer from that began with Western contact and
continue today: we die younger. We are less educated. More
of us are in poverty. More of us are in prison. More of us
are unemployed, and the list goes on. This is not right and
it is not acceptable.
We have a strong case to make, and we are prepared
to make it on November 4. We are prepared to defend our policy
for as long as it takes to correct the social and educational
imbalances suffered by Hawaiians. All we want is to fulfill
the mission that Ke Ali’i Pauahi entrusted with us more
than 100 years ago. We see this as an issue of equality. We
need to restore the balance that has been lost.
This is also an opportunity for all of us to
stand together and support this mission and its benefit to
our society. I hope the entire community – all of Hawaii’s
people – come together for this purpose; to bring about
balance, equality, hope and healing.
Mahalo.
Kamehameha Schools Ready
to Defend Preference Policy Before Appeals Panel
Excerpts From
Federal Judge Alan Kay's Ruling
News Conference Statements
Dee Jay Mailer
Michael J. Chun, Ph.D.
Letter from
Dee Jay Mailer to KS 'Ohana
SHOW YOUR SUPPORT
Legacy Day: Oct. 31, 2004
Prayer Service: Nov. 4, 2004
O'ahu: Download
Event Flyer (Acrobat PDF 552 KB)
Maui: Download
Event Flyer (Acrobat PDF 467 KB)
Hawai'i: Download
Event Flyer (Acrobat PDF 93 KB)
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