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Papahānaumokuākea 'Ahahui Alaka'i (PAA) is a ten-day experiential leadership program that brings together teachers, business people, policy-makers as well as potential community leaders interested in learning and being inspired by science and traditional knowledge management practices. Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument encompasses roughly 140,000 square miles of the Pacific Ocean, an area larger than all the country's national parks combined. The area around the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands is an important safe haven for wildlife such as the threatened green turtle and the endangered Hawaiian monk seal. ‘Ahahui refers to society, club or association. Alaka’i is Hawaiian for ambassador or leader. The Hawaiian word /acronym PAA means steadfast, learned, determined, strong, to hold, keep, retain.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Reflections: Miriam Sutton

PA’A: “steadfast, learned, determined, strong, to hold, keep, retain.”

I walked along the paths with the albatross once more today and even made an attempt to teach them about their parents’ journeys out to sea. It is hard to imagine what tomorrow morning will be like without waking up to albatross calls at dawn or hearing the puttering of their feet just before take-off or ducking to avoid a collision with an adult returning from a 2-week, 2000+ mile journey to the Arctic. I will surely miss those encounters.

Our PA’A project presentations were completed today and most of our afternoon was free for us to enjoy Midway. After a final snorkel at the cargo pier, I biked around the island for one more chance to absorb as much as I could from the wildlife and the aura of PA’A that engulfs Midway. I met so many wonderful people this week who were devoted to making our experience at the Midway Wildlife Refuge unique and memorable. To each of them, I am truly grateful. I have many new friends who I will carry forward in my heart as I work to implement my PA’A project back home.

Things I will miss when I leave Midway: monk seals and sea turtles hauling out onto the shore to warm themselves in the hot sand and sun; watching the albatross surf the waves on the south shore of Sand Island; and watching the albatross chicks practicing for flight with all the awkwardness of a teenager trying to manage gangly growth spurts.

What I will not miss when I leave Midway is the plastic-filled stomachs of dead chicks or the mournful cries of the adults as they search for their chick who died while the parents were out to sea foraging for food.

Things I will take with me when I leave Midway: a deeper understanding of the factors that affect the wildlife struggling to survive among the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands; the support of my PA’A ‘ohana (family); and the compassion of the scientists and volunteers who live and work on this remote island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. I take with me “PA’A,” to guide my thoughts and actions with my students as we work within our community to monitor and conserve our pristine estuarine environment.

Mahalo! (Thanks!)
photo credits: Miriam Sutton

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