A group of Native Hawaiians living in North Texas are raising money to help victims of last week鈥檚 massive wildfires in Maui, which killed at least 96 people and destroyed thousands of homes.
Pomai Uyehara, owner of Pineapple Grill Texas in Hurst and an Island of Hawaii native, said learning about the devastation in Maui while being thousands of miles away left her with a sense of hopelessness.
鈥淚t's almost like a pain 鈥 like a birthing pain is how I can describe it 鈥 for our people,鈥 Uyehara said. 鈥淎nd for not just our people, but everybody that was there.鈥
She and her husband Barry were up one night at 2:30 a.m. watching videos of the destruction on social media and crying. That鈥檚 when she said they decided to find a way to extend their kahea, or calling.
The couple reached out to hula schools, a Montessori school and friends across the community to help in planning a fundraiser event with food from Pineapple Grill as well as Hawaiian song and dance.
All proceeds will go to Project Aloha, Uyehara said 鈥 specifically to four families affected by the wildfires.
鈥淭hese four families have lost everything,鈥 she said. 鈥淭o rebuild, if we can help them in a month or two, getting a toaster or a microwave 鈥 we would like to do that as well.鈥
The Uyeharas are raising money with the help of people like Manu Birkmire, who runs Ka Pa Hula O Manulani, a school that teaches hula and other elements of Hawaiian culture including history and language.
Birkmire鈥檚 reaction to the scope of the devastation caused by the wildfires came in waves. The first was helplessness and heartbreak. The second was the loss of historic landmarks.
But Birkmire kept in mind the Hawaiian greeting aloha 鈥 which also describes a sense of peace, love and kindness 鈥 to give her a sense of hope, and to push her to offer her services to the fundraiser and the community she'd been part of her whole life.
鈥淭hat's why everyone knows that word,鈥 Birkmire said. 鈥淭he Hawaiian people understand that the basis and the foundation of life in good times and in struggles is that love for each other, that support for each other, that unification and harmony, the coming together.鈥

Charman Aiwohi has known both Uyehara and Birkmire for years. He also runs a hula school with his family in Dallas, Keola鈥檚 Hula Halau.
Some of Aiwohi's family still live in Maui 鈥 on the eastern side, away from where most of the wildfires burned. He said raising money and awareness locally extends a helping hand while also mitigating some of his own fear, too.
鈥淥ur hope is to raise as much as we can and send our aloha to Hawaii, letting them know we are here in Texas,鈥 he said. 鈥淓ven though we don't live there, we can still try to do what we can to share our love for them.鈥
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