Making Waves in Waikiki: Hawaii's
Surfing Heritage by Adam Singleton
The Hawaiians are credited with
being the fathers of surfing, and are known to have practiced the
sport as early as the 15th century AD. The Hawaiian name for
surfing "He'enalu" - can be translated as wave sliding.
During its early history, surfing was taken as a sacred practice
and only those with a high social status could take part; in other
words - Hawaiian kings and queens were surfers. Ironically, today,
surfing is seen by the general population as a sport for those who
have dropped out of society, the very opposite to how it began.
As a people living on a cluster of small islands in a very big
sea, the Hawaiians were not surprisingly fascinated by the ocean,
and attached great meaning to its moods and forms. In a similar
way to which the Inuit are said to have many names for snow, the
Hawaiians also have hundreds of words to describe the various
forms of the ever changing sea.
Just as modern day surf bums insist on surfing as a lifestyle
rather than just a sport and thus devote great portions of time
and money to the pursuit of the waves, Hawaiians also found
unfathomable bounds with the practise, as the writings of Kepelino
Keauokalani, a 19th Century Hawaiian Scholar, shows in his
observations of the local Hawaiian surfers:
"All thought of work is at the end, only that of sport is
left. The wife may go hungry, the children, the whole family, but
the head of the house does not care. He is all for sport, that is
his food. All day there is nothing but surfing. Many go out
surfing as early as four in the morning: men, women,
children."
Such was the desire of the ancient Hawaiians for wave sliding that
if the distant storms didn't generate sufficient waves to ride,
surfers with enlist the help of a "kahuna" - a priest
who would pray to the gods and ask for surf to come to Hawaiian
shores.
However, surfing was to move into a period of decline following
the arrival of Christian Missionaries who believed surfing was a
hedonist act and a waste of time. They adamantly preach against
surfing's existence, and by the late 1800s, the sport had almost
been completely exterminated. Had it not been for a few hardcore
surfers who continued to practise the sports and Hawaiian kings
such as David Kalakau, surfing may have died out all together.
However, the gradual decline of the missionaries influence allowed
surfing to breathe again, and by the start of the 1900s, surfing
had not only regained its former popularity in Hawaii, but was
beginning to spread to other beaches of the world.
By the late 1920s, tourists from all over the world were booking
into newly built hotels
in Waikiki in their hundreds, all eager to experience the
world's most famous beach and see the exotic "surf
people" for themselves. Another 30 years on, and waves of
American surf migrants began to arrive from California in search
of the renowned Hawaiian waves, that had reached legendary status
is surf circles.
Now, surfing is a billion dollar industry, practiced across the
world from Iceland to Indonesia - but let's not forget those
pioneering Hawaiian kings and queens without which, the sport of
surfing may never have been invented.
About the Author
Adam Singleton is an online,
freelance journalist and keen gardener. He lives in Scotland
with his two dogs.
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