Divine Breath

In a recent interview,1 Brian Keaulana of the famous Makaha surfing family said, "Aloha is enveloping someone with your whole essence or aura.  It's understanding the true essence of yourself and giving it to others." His words resonated deeply for me as they came at the end of a long dispiriting day playing my business role as a systems analyst and general digital janitor.  These are tough times in the world of commerce and that pressure seems to bring out the worst in people.  The politics of our times are also increasingly bitter and divisive with more name calling than cool rational thinking.  There's a scene in the Ghostbusters movies when a tidal wave of foamy purple ooze, pure evil incarnate, is threatening to engulf New York. That's the metaphor that had been haunting my day. If there were an exact opposite of Aloha, this would be it.

I've read explanations of the word Aloha that seem to dance around the meaning without ever getting down to the essence of it.  They say it means hello, and also goodbye, empathy, patience... Basically every squishy caricature of the laid back Polynesian lifestyle rolled into an easily digested fast food meme.  I used to work with a poser who always had a surfboard on his car, came into the office wearing Hawaiian print shirts and invariably greeted everyone with his trademark, "Aloha!!!" Embarrassing and sad to watch.

I can't pretend to any deep understanding of Aloha really, but I've experienced the kindness and grace of the Polynesians personally and perhaps that's the only way to really understand it. In any event, I thought I'd at least try to add some insight.

The word Aloha is a contraction of two concepts.  Alo means the human face or presence and ha means breath, or the breath of life.  Brian Keaulana explained that in ancient times, Hawaiians would touch their foreheads together and share breaths as a greeting, literally exchanging the sacred breath of life to show respect and acknowledge their connection. In the Hawaiian culture, words have an active spiritual power, known as mana, and the action of Aloha is an invocation of the divine, a moment of mutual reverence.  A shared prayer.

I think that simple acknowledgment of the spiritually divine is at the root of Aloha because it forces you to put yourself into perspective and reminds you to behave in a humble, thankful and gracious manner.

Aloha kâua!

Just for fun, here are some variations on the Aloha theme, courtesy of The Hawaiian Dictionary2 

Aloha `oe!
ah loh' hah oe!
May you be loved or greeted!
Farewell or greetings to one person.

Aloha kâua!
ah loh' hah KAH'oo (w)ah!
May there be friendship or love between us!
Greetings to you and me!

Ke aloha nô!
ah loh hah NOH'
Aloha indeed!

 

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1 The Surfer's Path, Issue 76
2 Hawaiian Dictionary, Pukui, Mary Kawena & Elbert, Samuel H.,University of Hawai`i Press, Honolulu, 1986.