Last Saturday’s highway picketing in Anahola by Hawaiian sovereignty advocates went off without the conflicts between demonstrators and drivers that police feared. For that, the protestors and the motoring public deserve equal praise. Standing beside Kuhio Highway and waving signs
Last Saturday’s highway picketing in Anahola by Hawaiian sovereignty advocates
went off without the conflicts between demonstrators and drivers that police
feared. For that, the protestors and the motoring public deserve equal
praise.
Standing beside Kuhio Highway and waving signs proclaiming
“Exploitation of Hawa’i” and “This is not the U.S.A.” was an exercise
of the demonstrators’ right to peaceful assembly, ironically protected by the
very country that they contend is occupied illegally by the United States’
annexation of Hawai’i 105 years ago. There was potential, though, for hard
feelings between the picketers and the motorists it wanted to voluntarily stop
and accept printed information about the sovereignty issue. Not everyone who
lives on and visits Kaua’i agrees with the Hawaiian independence movement, and
even people with neutral feelings might have bridled at having their drives
interrupted by roadside strangers.
But the demonstrators didn’t overstep
their bounds. They were able to flag down some vehicles and hand out literature
explaining their claim that Hawa’i should be a sovereign nation. They also
garnered more news coverage of their position, as did a separate independence
group that was rallying at the same time in Po’ipu. There were no reported
signs, though, of any ruffled feathers other than simple differences of
opinion. Motorists either drove by without difficulty or took the
demonstrators’ literature with apparent grace.
Kaua’i Police officials who
counseled the Anahola demonstrators in advance can take some credit for things
staying cool. The biggest share, however, goes to the demonstrators themselves.
By keeping their emotions in check and obeying laws they say don’t necessarily
apply to them, they showed an ability to state their case without slipping into
negative behavior that could harm their relations with the rest of the island
and their hope for support.