News
conference re Doe v Kamehameha hearing
Statement by Michael J. Chun, Ph.D.,
President and Headmaster, Kapalama Campus
October
16, 2004
Aloha and thank you, Dee Jay.
You have heard our leaders talk about the very
important occasion that is occurring on November 4 and how
Kamehameha Schools is responding to it.
I felt it was important to try to connect these
very important aspects of our institution to those we serve
– the children who attend our schools. And I would like
to do that through the words of one of our students whom I
have known for several years and who has agreed to let us
share his story with you as an example of what Kamehameha
does in our community.
This is what our student shared in his application
for a Presidential Scholar Award:
“It’s hard to describe yourself
in less than 500 words. What could I tell you that would make
me stand out from the crowd? I could tell you about how I’ve
been the stable force holding my family together ever since
my grandfather passed away six years ago. How I have been
forced to face my mother’s gambling addiction, or my
stepfather’s addiction to speed. About how my 10-year-old
brother has to go to therapy for depression. But isn’t
that just another typical family these days?
“I could tell you about how I haven’t
had any contact with my father since I was one, when he went
to jail for burglary. About how he used my mom to pay for
his cocaine addiction how he’s really homosexual and
only married to have a kid, or how he just went back to jail
for the molestation of a 13-year-old boy. But what teen doesn’t
complain about his parents every now and again?
“I could tell you how hard I push myself
in school, not only academically but socially as well. How,
as a boarder since my seventh grade year, I not only know
what responsibilities come with freedom, but that I also fulfill
them. About how I run on the state champion cross-country
team, or helped the JV physics team place third in the nation.
How I always push myself to try my hardest and always improve
so that one day my kids won’t have to pay their own
college tuition like I do. How I sing in the school choir,
or play in my own punk rock band. How I’m the chairperson
for the Weekend Activities Committee. How I’m part of
the national Honor society, or how I voluntarily tutored intermediate
students. How, despite all my extracurricular activities,
I still remember that it’s important to have fun and
be yourself. How I surf on the weekends, or break dance every
now and again. But who’s to say that not every youth
tries so hard to make the best of everything he or she is
given?
“I could tell you about how being Hawaiian
plays an intricate part in how I live my life. What it feels
like to be part of an ethnicity that is slowly going extinct,
getting smaller and more diluted with every generation. How
it feels to live in a place where the native ethnicity is
the minority. How my culture, despite the fact that it was
once forbidden, now flourishes because there are people like
me who refuse to lie down and die so easily. How I take pride
in my heritage even though in many aspects it is frowned upon.
But who doesn’t feel a little nostalgic for the “good
old days” every now and then?
“So why don’t I just make it easy
for you guys and tell you one word that describes everything
I am. One word that encapsulates my being. One word that will
allow you to decide whether or not I make the cut. Survivor.”
This young man, who, by the way, was named a
Presidential Scholar in 2002, today is at MIT earning a degree
in biomedical engineering. His is just one of many other examples
of the kind of young people who come to Kamehameha –
now and throughout our history - who are able to gain from
the experience something they may never have been able to
achieve otherwise.
This is what Kamehameha means to our community.
This is what our policy of giving preference to children of
Hawaiian ancestry means to our community. This is why we need
to defend our policy. Mahalo.
Kamehameha
Schools Ready to Defend Preference Policy Before Appeals Panel
Excerpts From
Federal Judge Alan Kay's Ruling
News Conference Statements
Nainoa Thompson
Dee Jay Mailer
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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