14/05/2026
Interested in trying hula❓ If so, take advantage of this special offer and book your first lesson for £5. To claim the offer, simply share this post in a message to Jo.📨
Please share this with all your friends; you never know who might be interested in learning hula!🌺
13/05/2026
Interested in trying hula? If so, take advantage of this special offer and book your first lesson for £5. To claim the offer, simply share this photo/post in a message to Jo.📨
Please share this post with all your friends; you never know who might be interested in learning hula!🫶🏼
08/05/2026
❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
She was given away. Twice.
She was born Margaret Souza on May 28, 1925 in Honolulu. Her parents handed her to a great-aunt and uncle in Palolo Valley as a hānai child. When they both died, she was sent back to her birth mother. Then her birth mother sent her to ANOTHER great-aunt in Pauoa Valley. That second aunt was Helen Correa. And Helen Correa knew the hula.
Margaret's family was strict Christian. The hula was a closed book. Most of Hawaii had forgotten it on purpose. The dance had been outlawed in 1830 by a queen who had converted. The Hawaiian language had been banned from schools in 1896. By the 1940s, the old hula, in Maiki's own words, "lived only in the talent of a few masters."
Most of them were dying. Margaret was supposed to become a nurse. She chose the dying dance instead.
She studied under the great Lōkālia Montgomery. She graduated as a dancer at 18. She graduated as a kumu hula at 23. In 1948, she opened a studio in her family's living room.
Four years later, she did something nobody alive had been allowed to do in living memory. She got permission to call her studio a HĀLAU. That single word had been gone from Hawaiian life for so long the sign painter wrote it backward on her new sign. She kept the sign anyway.
The halau filled fast. Hundreds of students at a time. Children, adults, beginners, professionals. Hawaiians, haoles, locals, anyone. She didn't care who you were. If you wanted to learn, she taught you.
Then in 1972, she did the one thing every traditionalist swore could not be done. She put an ad in the newspaper. Not for hula students. For TEACHERS. Anyone interested in becoming a kumu hula could apply.
People were furious. You don't ADVERTISE for masters. You can't train kumu hula in a class. It was sacred. It was secret. It was DYING.
She did it anyway. Twenty-six students graduated from the Papa Lehua class in 1973: Robert Cazimero, Leina'ala Heine, Kaha'i Topolinski, Kalena Silva. The first new generation of kumu hula in decades.
Then she did it again. And again. By the early 1980s she had personally graduated 42 kumu hula. They started their own schools. Their schools started graduating their own teachers. Her hula grandchildren.
She called them her hula brothers and sisters. She invented the term. She invented the "hula book," where every dancer writes down every chant and motion they learn. Every halau in Hawaii uses one today. And she coined three words that have outlasted her by more than 40 years.
Hula is life.
She died on June 19, 1984. She was 59.
Over 3,000 people came to Kawaiaha'o Church. Her student Puakea Nogelmeier called the funeral an affair of state. Years later he would say it like this: "When I say that I was dirt and she was light, the light went out."
Robert Cazimero said her death changed everything for him. He stopped doing hula for himself. He started doing it for her. To this day his rule is one sentence. "I would never want to do anything to embarrass my kumu."
Her halau is still there. Run by her daughter Coline. It has been teaching for almost 80 years. In 2005, Cazimero's all-male halau swept the Merrie Monarch festival. He did it for her, twenty-one years after she died.
Every halau in Hawaii today, every hula book on every shelf, every dancer who calls another dancer her hula sister, all of it traces back to one Christian girl who was given away and then chose to mother a tradition the world had nearly killed. "I don't know if hula would've survived without her," her daughter said.
Some women raise children. Maiki Aiu Lake raised a culture. She mothered the dance. She mothered the teachers. She mothered an entire renaissance.
The girl nobody kept became the mother nobody forgets.
21/02/2026
100% agree☺️ And with hula, dancing it grounds us, calms our nervous systems, refreshes/resets our mental states & emotions, and brings us back to total equilibrium❣️🥰🫶🏼 Pure joy🌺💖
A meta-analysis of 218 trials found it provides larger reductions in symptoms than walking, strength training, or antidepressants alone.
Dance simultaneously releases serotonin, dopamine, and oxytocin while lowering cortisol. When performed in groups, it creates interbrain synchrony that strengthens social bonds. Researchers are now advocating for dance to be considered a front-line treatment for depression.
Whether in a living room or a ballroom, moving to the beat is proving transformative.
Source: The BMJ
26/01/2026
Hawaiian hula class is ongoing in Hereford, and we welcome new members to join us❣️ To book a spot, please send us a message😊
26/01/2026
Apart from my hālau, Lehualani Hula, I also share a class of hula at Holmer Park Spa & Health Club, where today our hula incorporated the kāhuli. This short video explains nicely about ka leo o ke kāhuli, the whistling snails.🐌🎶 Enjoy the keiki hula at the end too.💃🏼💝
"Kāhuli Aku, Kāhuli Mai" song story
Story about the song “Kāhuli Aku, Kāhuli Mai” from the documentary Listen to the Forest. This song is part of the Eddie Kamae Songbook A Musical Journey. Vis...