
Hawai'i
1/4/2021 | 3m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
Patricia, a master quilter and culture advocate, says that being Hawaiian is her pulse.
Patricia Lei Murray is a passionate advocate for preserving and sharing the culture of Hawai'i, her native island home. She is a master quilter, threading a deep devotion to ancestry, tradition, and Ohana into her work. Driven by an abiding connection to the ocean, mountains, and skies, Patricia says that being Hawaiian is her pulse.
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Funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Hawai'i
1/4/2021 | 3m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
Patricia Lei Murray is a passionate advocate for preserving and sharing the culture of Hawai'i, her native island home. She is a master quilter, threading a deep devotion to ancestry, tradition, and Ohana into her work. Driven by an abiding connection to the ocean, mountains, and skies, Patricia says that being Hawaiian is her pulse.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- When you asked what was taken away, much of our identity was looked upon as being unimportant.
And I think we are in all of this fray begging for identity and a fact that we matter.
(slow music) I think everyone makes a choice for themself as how they will carry on into the generations the things that matter to them.
It's music to hear my little grandchildren speaking Hawaiian.
When I was a child, we were not really encouraged to speak and if we couldn't do it well, don't do it at all.
But now all of that has changed and so that cultural identity is very important to us.
I would be happy anywhere in the world if my family was with me but the fact that these are our roots, our cultural beliefs are such that they encourage us to continually share them with our family.
Quilting is a avenue by which I can express my feelings.
Our ancestors lived the simple life but with as little as they had, they shared more.
Ohana is huge in the Hawaiian style of living and this is how we perpetuate all that we've learned from them.
And you know, so many people say don't stay in the past but if you do not honor the gift from your ancestors, what do you have to contribute in life?
I admire those who feel so strongly for our independence but sometimes I wonder do we want independence or do we want recognition for the things that were taken away?
It all comes back to the land, what we appreciate here, what we have gratitude for here.
These things will feed us.
These things will enlighten us.
Many of our values in Hawaiian living have a lot to do with making connection with the ocean, with the mountains, with the skies.
This is who we are, we lose this, we lose what is unique to us.
What does it mean to be Hawaiian?
It is my pulse, being Hawaiian, it is my pulse.
I try to honor my family, my roots, my marriage, my ancestors, the air that I breathe.
I am Hawaiian and it matters to me that this is my lineage.
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Funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.













