An Evening at Waikalua Loko Iʻa: Gathering for the Next 200
Education, Waikalua Loko I'a PAF 'Ohana Education, Waikalua Loko I'a PAF 'Ohana

An Evening at Waikalua Loko Iʻa: Gathering for the Next 200

On May 9, more than 200 educators, students, and partners gathered at Waikalua Loko Iʻa to connect around a shared vision for Hawaiʻi's future, through food, film, and community. Through storytelling, learning, and time spent in relationship with place, our gathering explored what it means to steward the people, places, and possibilities that will shape the next 200 years.

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Welcome to the Next 200: A Message from PAF CEO Kapono Ciotti
Education PAF 'Ohana Education PAF 'Ohana

Welcome to the Next 200: A Message from PAF CEO Kapono Ciotti

We live in a moment that asks a profound question of each of us: What kind of ancestor will you become?

The Next 200 is a movement rooted in that question and in the ancient wisdom that has always guided us here in Hawaiʻi. 

To understand what we mean by the Next 200, we turn to the Hawaiian word moʻokūʻauhau, often translated as “genealogy.” But genealogy, in the Western sense, is a flat word. It connotes diagrams of names arranged in neat rows moving in one direction. Moʻokūʻauhau is something far more alive and multidimensional. It is the story of who we are, carried in the bodies of our kūpuna and passed forward through our actions and, in time, our descendants. Moʻokūʻauhau is legacy as living practice. It is the story of your family carrying inherited knowledge forward into every new generation. The Next 200 is a way of moving through time.

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Small Hands Carrying Big Responsibility
Education spoon+fork Education spoon+fork

Small Hands Carrying Big Responsibility

The Pacific American Foundation is dedicated to education—cultivating the next generation of caretakers who can serve our wahi pana and beyond. That mission is exactly what The Next 200 is all about: building leaders rooted in ʻike, responsibility, and a deep connection to place.

It is always a special moment when the students share back with us—because these are the moments that show what the next generation is capable of.

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After the Rains, We Rise
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After the Rains, We Rise

On the last day of February, pō mahina mōhalu, our community gathered at Waikalua Loko Iʻa to do some hana. This was after the intense rains that brought much silt and debris down the Kawa and Kaneohe Streams.

Heavy rains on Saturday February 21, 2026 filled Kāneʻohe Stream. Although Saturday February 28, 2026 was a beautiful and clear day, the debris of the prior week’s rains was in the Bay and on our shores.

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