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Native Hawaiians

Native Hawaiians
(Kānaka Maoli, Hawaiʻi Maoli)
Hawaiian Schoolchildren by Henry Wetherbee Henshaw modified.jpg
Native Hawaiian schoolchildren, circa 1900
Total population
alone: 164,918, any combination: 527,077 as of the 2010 census.
Regions with significant populations
 United States
(Hawaii, California, Washington, Utah, Alaska)
Languages
English, Hawaiian, Hawaiʻi Sign Language (HSL), Hawaiian Pidgin
Religion
Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, Mormonism,Hawaiian religion
Related ethnic groups
Polynesian peoples, Austronesian peoples

Native Hawaiians (Hawaiiankānaka ʻōiwi, kānaka maoli, and Hawaiʻi maoli) are the indigenous Polynesian people of the Hawaiian Islands or their descendants. Native Hawaiians trace their ancestry back to the original Polynesian settlers of Hawaii.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau report for 2000, there are 401,162 people who identified themselves as being "Native Hawaiian" alone or in any combination, but they are not considered Native Americans. 140,652 people identified themselves as being "Native Hawaiian" alone. The majority of Native Hawaiians reside in the State of Hawaiʻi (two-thirds), and the rest are scattered among other states, especially in the American Southwest, and with a high concentration in California.

The history of Native Hawaiians, like the history of Hawaii, is commonly classified into four major periods:

One hypothesis is that the first Polynesians arrived in Hawaiʻi in the 4th century from the Marquesas, and were followed by Tahitians in AD 1300, who then conquered the original inhabitants. Another is that a single, extended period of settlement populated the islands. Evidence for a Tahitian conquest of the islands include the legends of Hawaiʻiloa and the navigator-priest Paʻao, who is said to have made a voyage between Hawaiʻi and the island of "Kahiki" (Tahiti) and introduced many customs. Early historians, such as Fornander and Beckwith, subscribed to this Tahitian invasion theory, but later historians, such as Kirch, do not mention it.King Kalakaua claimed that Paʻao was from Samoa.

Some writers claim that other settlers in Hawaiʻi were forced into remote valleys by newer arrivals. They claim that stories about the Menehune, little people who built heiau and fishponds, prove the existence of ancient peoples who settled the islands before the Hawaiians.


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