“I have kids in their 20s now and would love to teach them at least the basics,” she shared. “They’re very interested in learning more about their own heritage, too, because they were not raised in Hawaiʻi.”
In addition to Solatorio’s Hawaiian language class, the Live Aloha Festival featured lei making, Pacific Islander foods and crafts and entertainment by a variety of Washington-based hula halau (hula schools) and Na Leo Pilimehana, the world’s top-selling female Hawaiian music group. Alaska Airlines has supported the festival for more than a decade.
“Being here is really a chance to see our community in one location and meet them where they are,” said Lucy Purcell, co-founder of Alaska’s Pacific Islander Alliance, which supports employees and fosters Pacific Islander culture. “It’s also a chance to celebrate Hawaiʻi. It’s fun to see people wearing lei or eating the foods we’re used to eating.”
Benjamin Baker, whose family moved from Oʻahu to Washington state in the 1960s, sees the Live Aloha Festival as a chance to contribute to the perpetuation of Hawaiian culture.
“It’s embedded in me to continue the tradition, not only learning from my kupuna (elders), but passing it on to my children and grandchildren so that they will continue to learn where they came from—especially for those that were born here on the continent.”