Aina Hanau / Birth Land: Volume 92 (Sun Tracks)
Author:Ā Brandy NÄlani McDougallĀ |Ā Paperback
āÄina HÄnau / Birth LandĀ is a powerful collection of new poems by Kanaka Ź»Åiwi (Native Hawaiian) poet Brandy NÄlani McDougall. āÄina hÄnauāor the land of oneās birthāsignifies identity through intimate and familial connections to place and creates a profound bond between the people in a community. McDougallās poems flow seamlessly between āÅlelo Hawaiāi and English, forming rhythms and patterns that impress on the reader a deep understanding of the land. Tracing flows from the mountains to the ocean, from the sky to the earth, and from ancestor to mother to child, these poems are rooted in the rich ancestral and contemporary literature of HawaiŹ»i āmoŹ»olelo, moŹ»okūʻauhau, and mele āhonoring Hawaiian Ź»Äina, culture, language, histories, aesthetics, and futures.
The poems inĀ Äina HÄnau / Birth LandĀ cycle through sacred and personal narratives while exposing and fighting ongoing American imperialism, settler colonialism, militarism, and social and environmental injustice to protect the Ź»Äina and its people. The ongoing environmental crisis in HawaiŹ»i, inextricably linked to colonialism and tourism, is captured with stark intensity as McDougall writes,Ā Violence is what we settle for / because weāve been led to believe / green paper can feed us / more than green land. The experiences of birth, motherhood, miscarriage, and the power of Native Hawaiian traditions and self-advocacy in an often dismissive medical system is powerfully narrated by the speaker of the titular poem, written for McDougallās daughters.
āÄina HÄnauĀ reflects on what it means to be from and belong to an Ź»Äina hÄnau, as well as what it means to be an āaĢina haĢnau, as all mothers serve as the first birth lands for their children.

Description
Author:Ā Brandy NÄlani McDougallĀ |Ā Paperback
āÄina HÄnau / Birth LandĀ is a powerful collection of new poems by Kanaka Ź»Åiwi (Native Hawaiian) poet Brandy NÄlani McDougall. āÄina hÄnauāor the land of oneās birthāsignifies identity through intimate and familial connections to place and creates a profound bond between the people in a community. McDougallās poems flow seamlessly between āÅlelo Hawaiāi and English, forming rhythms and patterns that impress on the reader a deep understanding of the land. Tracing flows from the mountains to the ocean, from the sky to the earth, and from ancestor to mother to child, these poems are rooted in the rich ancestral and contemporary literature of HawaiŹ»i āmoŹ»olelo, moŹ»okūʻauhau, and mele āhonoring Hawaiian Ź»Äina, culture, language, histories, aesthetics, and futures.
The poems inĀ Äina HÄnau / Birth LandĀ cycle through sacred and personal narratives while exposing and fighting ongoing American imperialism, settler colonialism, militarism, and social and environmental injustice to protect the Ź»Äina and its people. The ongoing environmental crisis in HawaiŹ»i, inextricably linked to colonialism and tourism, is captured with stark intensity as McDougall writes,Ā Violence is what we settle for / because weāve been led to believe / green paper can feed us / more than green land. The experiences of birth, motherhood, miscarriage, and the power of Native Hawaiian traditions and self-advocacy in an often dismissive medical system is powerfully narrated by the speaker of the titular poem, written for McDougallās daughters.
āÄina HÄnauĀ reflects on what it means to be from and belong to an Ź»Äina hÄnau, as well as what it means to be an āaĢina haĢnau, as all mothers serve as the first birth lands for their children.











