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<div class="figure"><ANTIMG src="images/p055.png" alt="Shark." width-obs="720" height-obs="215"></div>
<h2 class="label">VIII</h2>
<h2 class="main">A SHARK PUNISHED AT WAIKIKI</h2></div>
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<p class="xd31e1330"><span class="xd31e1330init">A</span>mong the legendary characters of the early Hawaiians was Ka-ehu—the little yellow
shark of Pearl Harbor. He had been given magic power and great wisdom by his ancestor
Ka-moho-alii the shark-god, brother of the fire goddess Pele.</p>
<p>Part of his life had been spent with his parents, who guarded the sea precipices of
the Coast of Puna in the southern part of the island Hawaii. While at Pearl Harbor
he became homesick for the beauty of Puna, so he chanted:</p>
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<p class="line">“O my land of rustling lehua<SPAN class="noteRef" id="xd31e1336src" href="#xd31e1336">1</SPAN>-trees!</p>
<p class="line">Rain is treading on your budding flowers,</p>
<p class="line">It carries them to the sea.</p>
<p class="line">They meet the fish in the sea.</p>
<p class="line">This is the day when love meets love,</p>
<p class="line">My longings are stirring within me</p>
<p class="line">For the spirit friends of my land.</p>
<p class="line">They call me back to my home,</p>
<p class="line">I must return.”</p>
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<p>Ka-ehu called his shark friends and started along the Oahu shores on his way to Hawaii.
At Waikiki they met Pehu, a shark visitor from Maui, who lived in the sea belonging
to Hono-ka-hau. Pehu was a man-eating shark and was swimming back and forth at Kalehua-wike.<SPAN class="noteRef" id="xd31e1353src" href="#xd31e1353">2</SPAN> He was waiting for some surf-rider to go out far enough to be caught.</p>
<p>Ka-ehu asked him what he was doing there. He replied, “I am catching a crab for my
breakfast.”</p>
<p>Ka-ehu said, “We will help you catch your crab.”</p>
<p>He told Pehu to go near the coral reef while he and his large retinue of sharks would
go seaward. When a number of surf-riders were far out he and his sharks would appear
and drive them shoreward in a tumultuous rush; then Pehu could easily catch the crab.
This pleased the shark from Maui, so he went close to the reef and hid himself in
its shadows.</p>
<p>Ka-ehu said to his friends: “We must kill this man-eating shark who is destroying
our people. This will be a part of our pay to them for honoring us at Puu-loa (Pearl
Harbor). We will all go and push Pehu into the shallow water.”</p>
<p>A number of surf-riders poised on the waves, and Pehu called for the other sharks to come, but Ka-ehu told him to wait for a better
chance. Soon two men started on a wave from the distant dark blue sea where the high
surf begins.</p>
<p>Ka-ehu gave a signal for an attack. He told his friends to rush in under the great
wave and as it passed over the waiting Pehu, crowd the men and their surf-boards to
one side and push the leaping Pehu so that he would be upset. Then while he was floundering
in the surf they must hurl him over the reef.</p>
<p>As Pehu leaped to catch one of the coming surf-riders he was astonished to see the
man shoved to one side, then as he rose almost straight up in the water he was caught
by the other sharks and tossed over and over until he plunged head first into a deep
hole in the coral. There he thrashed his great tail about, but only forced himself
farther in so that he could not escape.</p>
<p>The surf-riders were greatly frightened when they saw the company of sharks swimming
swiftly outside the coral reef—but they were not afraid of Pehu. They went out to
the hole and killed him and cut his body in pieces. Inside the body they found hair
and bones, showing that this shark had been destroying some of their people.</p>
<p>They took the pieces of the body of that great fish to Pele-ula,<SPAN class="noteRef" id="xd31e1372src" href="#xd31e1372">3</SPAN> where they made a great oven and burned the pieces.</p>
<p>Ka-ehu passed on toward Hawaii as a knight-errant, meeting many adventures and punishing
evil-minded residents of the great sea.</p>
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<div class="figure p058width"><ANTIMG src="images/p058.png" alt="Feather Helmet" width-obs="255" height-obs="359"><p class="figureHead">Feather Helmet</p>
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<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><SPAN class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1336src">1</SPAN></span> Ohia-lehua. <span lang="la">Metrosideros polymorpha</span>. <SPAN class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1336src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</SPAN></p>
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<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><SPAN class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1353src">2</SPAN></span> Near the Moana Hotel. <SPAN class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1353src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</SPAN></p>
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<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><SPAN class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1372src">3</SPAN></span> Near corner Nuuanu and Beretania Streets. <SPAN class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1372src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</SPAN></p>
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