Friend
Hoa
$1 – $99
Every gift matters. Hoa stand in friendship with our mission and keep our day-to-day work moving.
- Acknowledgment in our annual report
Donors & Volunteers
Our work depends on a circle of donors and volunteers who give what they can — funds, hours, ʻike, and aloha. We recognize that circle here, organized into traditional Hawaiian ranks of relationship.
Giving Tiers
Rather than generic “levels,” we name our giving tiers using traditional Hawaiian designators for relationship — from Hoa (friend) up to Mōʻī (sovereign). Each tier carries its own kuleana and our gratitude.
Names reflect levels of giving and stewardship in our community — not a hierarchy of worth. Every gift, regardless of size, is received with the same aloha.
Friend
$1 – $99
Every gift matters. Hoa stand in friendship with our mission and keep our day-to-day work moving.
Supporter
$100 – $499
Kākoʻo provide steady support that funds materials, transportation, and the meals shared at our gatherings.
Parent · Steward
$500 – $999
Mākua step into a stewarding role — sustaining our practitioners and the kūpuna who teach them.
Guardian
$1,000 – $4,999
Kahu guard the long-term health of our programs and help us extend the hale to new haumāna.
Royal Patron
$5,000 – $9,999
Aliʻi underwrite major projects — a full pahu drum cohort, an island hub build-out, a season of programming.
Sovereign
$10,000+
Mōʻī are visionary partners. Their gifts shape what Hale Mua becomes in this generation and the next.
Mahalo Nui Loa
With permission, we publicly recognize current-year donors at the Kākoʻo tier and above. Donors who prefer to give privately are held in the same aloha.
Donors at the Mākua tier and above are recognized in our annual report. Aliʻi and Mōʻī receive recognition at the annual Lot Kapuāiwa awards at Huliheʻe Palace.
Volunteer · Hoʻolauna
We need hands, hearts, and minds as much as we need funds. Below are the most common ways volunteers can plug in.
Help in the loʻi kalo and loko iʻa during our regular workdays.
Set up, registration, and breakdown for gatherings and the annual Lot Kapuāiwa awards.
Practitioners willing to teach within one of our eleven ongoing projects.
Bookkeeping, grant writing, document preparation, and translation.
Photographers, videographers, and writers to help tell our story.
Adults willing to support our OC3 paddling course or kāhili-bearer protocol training.