KAPAEMAHU UnErased

Aloha! In this History UnErased episode, you will hear the story of The Healer Stones of Kapaemahu, learn about their erasure in the age of American imperialism, as well as current efforts to restore the monument to the healer stones  - and the story of the mahu - to their rightful place in Hawaiian history. This History UnErased podcast is funded by the New York City Council. It was developed by History UnErased and produced and edited by Dinah Mack; Kathleen Barker; and Deb Fowler. Tremendous thanks to Dean Hamer and Joe Wilson for their generous support of this podcast episode. Both Kapaemahu and Healer Stones of Kapaemahu are directed by Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Dean Hamer & Joe Wilson, and Kanaka Pakipika.

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Joe Wilson
WATCHLIST: Films That Center LGBTQ+/MVPFAFF+ Native Hawaiians & Pacific Islanders

This May, GLAAD is dedicated to honoring the cultural contributions and influences LGBTQ+ AAPI community members have made, alongside highlighting films, TV shows, and other forms of media with significant LGBTQ+ AAPI representation. With help from Kristian Fanene Schmidt, we’re sharing a list of ten films and television shows that are dedicated to QTPI and MVPFAFF+ representation and inclusion, three of which were produced and directed by Dean Hamer & Joe Wilson of Qwaves Media.

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Joe Wilson
‘Kapaemahu’ team brings new animated queer love story ‘Aikāne’ to India

The team behind the acclaimed Hawaiian animated short Kapaemahu is back with a new animated short titled Aikāne.

It is an ancient term for intimate same-sex friends that has taken on new relevance with the worldwide resurgence of anti-LGBTQ hostility. The film Aikāne will have its Indian premiere at Kashish Mumbai International Queer Film Festival, South Asia’s biggest LGBTQ film festival, on 11 June.

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Joe Wilson
Hawaii Museum Revisits History of Gender-Fluid Healers

More than 500 years ago, Hawaiians placed four boulders on a Waikiki beach to honor visitors from the court of Tahiti’s king who had healed the sick. They were “mahu,” which in Hawaiian language and culture refers to someone with dual male and female spirit and a mixture of gender traits. The stones were neglected for many years, as Christian missionaries and other colonizing Westerners suppressed the role of mahu in Hawaiian society. At one point a bowling alley was built over the boulders.

Officials restored the stones multiple times since the 1960s but informational plaques installed next to them omitted references to mahu. The stones and the history of the four healers now are featured in an exhibit at Bishop Museum in Honolulu. The display highlights the deep roots of gender fluidity in Polynesia.

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Joe Wilson
Exclusive: ‘Kapaemahu’ Filmmakers Debut LGBTQ Romantic Adventure ‘Aikāne’

The team behind the acclaimed animated short Kapaemahu is debuting a new film inspired by Hawaiian culture, titled Aikāne — an ancient term for intimate same-sex friends that has taken on new relevance with the worldwide resurgence of anti-LGBTQ hostility. The film will premiere at the Animayo and Seattle International Film Festivals in May, followed by a series of screenings during Pride Month in June.

Aikāne tells the story of an island warrior who falls into a strange underwater world after being wounded in battle. When the octopus who rescues him shapeshifts into a handsome young man, sparks fly and an epic adventure begins. Love, trust and courage are the glue that bind the unlikely couple together in their fierce battle against foreign invaders.

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Joe Wilson
Judith Light to Executive Produce Animated Short ‘Falling’ (VARIETY EXCLUSIVE)

Emmy and Tony winner Judith Light has signed on as an executive producer for “Falling,” an animated short film from the filmmakers behind “Kapaemahu” — Daniel Sousa, Dean Hamer, Joe Wilson and Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu — which was shortlisted for the best animated short Oscar in 2021.

While “Kapaemahu” focused on Hawaii’s legendary gender-fluid healers (and expanded into a children’s book, feature documentary and immersive museum exhibition), “Falling” follows the romantic adventures of a valiant island warrior, a handsome young man and an octopus brought together by a twist of fate. The story is described as “an epic romantic adventure that instills hope in a time of rising prejudice and hate.”

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Joe Wilson
LGBTQ+ Role Models Are Critical

When my son came out, I found myself quickly learning how to navigate a new world where he might not be given the same rights and opportunities I expected for him. I was lost in a storm of rhetoric and hate pushing back against my child’s future.

Then we found Joe Wilson, a filmmaker, and his husband Dean Hamer. Joe’s film, Out in the Silence, portrayed LGBTQ+ issues in a rural U.S. town similar to our own. The film captured the transformative power of open dialogue with those that don’t share your beliefs.

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Joe Wilson
Kapaemahu’ Expands with Book, Exhibition and Documentary Film

The acclaimed, award-winning 2D animated short, Kapaemahu, is expanding into multiple mediums to tell the beautiful and traditional Hawaiian story of the four healing stones and the hero’s they are dedicated to. The planned expansion includes a children’s picture book, an interactive museum exhibit at Bishop Museum, and a documentary, all designed to shed light on this suppressed and hidden piece of Hawaiian history.

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Dean Hamer
Kapaemahu Qualifies for Oscar Nomination with Grand Prize Award at Spain’s Animayo Festival

Hawaiian short “Kapaemahu” took home the 15th Animayo Gran Canaria International Grand Jury Award and the chance to vie for the Academy Award’s short list of qualifying animated shorts. Written, directed and produced by Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Dean Hamer and Joe Wilson, “Kapaemahu” means stones of life in native Hawaiian and narrates the legend about four dual-spirit individuals who brought the healing arts of Tahiti to Hawaii, vesting their powers on four giant rocks, still revered to this day.

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Joe Wilson