"We're here, we're safe," navigator Nainoa Thompson said Monday from Cape Town. "We got around South Africa safely." The journey is also about building relationships and connections at all their stops, Thompson said.
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"We didn't know how to connect until our children danced, then their children danced," he said. "We had a chance today to witness what world peace looks like and sounds like," he added, describing the sounds of Hawaiian pahu drums beating along with African rhythms.
The stop was made possible with permission from Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who blessed the canoe during a 2012 visit to Hawaii, Thompson said. "We're finding the definitions of caring, compassion and aloha from many of the places that we go," Thompson said, reflecting on hearing news of the attacks on Paris. "We're just very blessed and very fortunate to be witness to it among all the stories of rage and anger."
The canoe will spend two weeks off the water before departing across the Atlantic Ocean for the first time to South America. Up to 200 crew members have sailed with Hokulea so far, joining and leaving the journey at various points.
Hokulea was first built and launched in the 1970s in an attempt to revive Polynesian wayfinding. The first voyage to Tahiti in 1976 was successful, and the canoe became an icon amid an ongoing Native Hawaiian renaissance.
The latest voyage is called Malama Honua, which means "to care for our Earth."
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