Lei (garland)
Lei (pronounced Lay) is a garland or wreath. More loosely defined, a lei is any series of objects strung together with the intent to be worn. The most popular concept of a lei in Hawaiian culture is a wreath of flowers presented upon arriving or leaving as a symbol of affection. This concept was popularized through tourism between the Hawaiian Islands and the continental United States in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Children and sweethearts are poetically referred to as "lei" and many ancient and modern songs and chants refer to this imagery.
Symbolism
A lei can be given to someone for a variety of reasons. Most commonly, these reasons include love, honor, or friendship for another person.[1] Common events during which leis may be distributed include graduations, weddings, and school dances.[1] Often the composition of a lei determine the meaning behind a lei; a lei made using a hala fruit for instance is said to be connected to love, desire, transition, and change.[2]
Materials
A lei (nā lei is the plural in the Hawaiian language) may be composed of a pattern or series of just about anything, but most commonly consists of fresh natural foliage such as flowers, leaves, vines, fern fronds, and seeds. The most commonly used flowers are those of plumerias, tuberose, carnations, orchids, and pikake, though maile leaves, ferns, and tī leaves are extremely popular as well as traditional among hula dancers. Other types of lei may include sea or land shells, fish teeth, bones, feathers, plastic flowers, fabric, paper (including origami and monetary bills), candy, or anything that can be strung together in a series or pattern and worn as a wreath or a necklace. The Hawaiian Island of Ni‘ihau is famous for its lei made of tiny gem-like shells.[3]
Crafting
The eight most common methods of making lei are:
Haku: three-ply braid incorporating additional materials. A method of making a lei by using a base material, such as softened tree bark or long leaves, and braiding it while adding the decorative plant material into each wrap of the braid. Normally used for flowers and foliage with long pliable petioles or stems.[4]
Hili: braid or plait with only one kind of material. Most commonly made from three or more strands of supple vine or fern braided together.[4]
Hilo: twist, double helix, intertwine. A method of making a lei by twisting two strands together to form a "rope". The popular and simple lei laʻi (tī leaf lei) is made using this method.[4]
Hipuʻu / nipuʻu: a method of making a lei by knotting the stems of the decorative plant material and stringing the next stem through the knot. It requires a very long stem on the decorative material. Similar to a daisy chain.[4]
Humu / humuhumu: sew to a backing, usually using a basting stitch. A method of making a lei by sewing the decorative material to a backing such as hala, laʻi, paper, or felt. Each successive row of lei material is overlapped on the previous to create a scale-like effect. Bougainvillea lei and feather hat lei often are made with this method.[4]
Kui: pierce, piercing stitch. A method of making a lei by sewing or piercing the decorative material with a needle and stringing it onto a thread. This is probably the style with which most Westerners are familiar. This method is commonly used to string flowers such as plumeria, rose, carnation, etc.[4]
Wili: wind, twist, crank, coil. A corkscrew-type twist, as found in a pig's tail and the seed pod of the wiliwili tree. A method of making a lei by winding fiber around successive short lengths of the decorative material. Sometimes base materials such as hala, laʻi, strands of raffia, or even strips of paper are used to make wrapping easier.[4]
Haku mele: to braid a song. A song composed out of affection for an individual is considered a lei.
Lei may be open or closed, depending on circumstance.
These leis are traditionally constructed using natural foliage.[4]
Historical context
Leis were originally worn by ancient Polynesians and some Asian people as part of custom.[5] They were often used by Native Hawaiians to signify their ranks and royalty.[5] They are also worn as a form of honor to each other and their gods.[6] The religion of the Native Hawaiians as well as the hula custom is tied into the leis that they wore.[5] Leis were introduced to Native Hawaiians by Polynesians who visited the islands and imparted the tradition of wearing leis onto the people.[5] On the first of every May, an event called Lei Day is celebrated to honor the act of lei making and the custom surrounding it.[7]
Customs
There are many customs and protocols associated with the giving, receiving, wearing, storing, and disposing of lei.[2] A story that originated during World War II tells of a hula dancer who dared to give a lei to a US soldier along with a kiss, leading it to become a tradition of lei distribution in modern times.[2] To this day, leis remain a notable aspect of Hawaiian culture.[2] Traditionalists give a lei by bowing slightly and raising it above the heart, allowing the recipient to take it, as raising the hands above another's head, or touching the face or head, is considered disrespectful. By tradition, only open lei are given to a pregnant or nursing woman. If due to allergies or other reasons a person cannot wear a lei which has just been given (for instance a musician who would tangle the lei in his or her guitar strap), the lei is displayed in a place of honor, such as the musician's music stand or microphone stand. Lei should never be thrown away casually, or tossed into the trash. Traditionally they should be returned to the place they were gathered, or if that is not possible, they should be returned to the earth by hanging in a tree, burying, or burning. A lei represents love, and to throw one away represents throwing away the love of the giver. Many types of lei can be left in a window to dry, allowing the natural fragrance to fill the room. This technique is often used in cars as well.
Polynesia
In Polynesian cultures, a lei is something that is created by someone and given to another with the intent to decorate that person for an emotional reason—usually as a sign of affection. Common reasons include greeting, farewell, affection or love, friendship, appreciation, congratulation, recognition, or to otherwise draw attention to the recipient. In Samoa, similar garlands fashioned of entire flowers, buds, seeds, nuts, plant fibers, leaves, ferns, seashells, or flower petals are called "asoa" or "ula", while single flowers or clusters worn in the hair or on the ear are called sei. In Tahiti such garlands are referred to as "hei" and in the Cook Islands they are called an "ei". Tongans are known for creating unique "kahoa" leis made of chains of flat, crescent or triangular arrangements made of flower petals and leaves sewn onto a leaf or cloth backing. Many modern Polynesian celebrations include the giving and receiving of leis in various forms, including recent adaptations of the flower/plant lei in which candy, folded currency bills, rolls of coinage, and even spam musubi are tied into garlands. "Non-traditional" materials such as cloth ribbon, sequins, cellophane wrap, curling ribbon, and yarn are often used to fashion leis in various forms today.
Hawaii
Among residents of Hawaiʻi, the most popular occasions at which nā lei can be found are birthdays, graduations, weddings, funerals, retirement parties, and bridal showers. It is not uncommon for a high school or college graduate to be seen wearing so many nā lei that they reach his or her ears or higher.[8][9]
On May 1 each year, Hawaiians celebrate "Lei Day", first conceived in 1927 by poet Don Blanding. At the time, Blanding was employed by the Honolulu Star Bulletin, and he shared his idea with columnist Grace Tower Warren, who came up the phrase, "May Day is Lei Day". The Hawaiian song, "May Day is Lei Day in Hawaii" was composed in 1927 by Ruth and Leonard "Red" Hawk.[10]
At the 81st Annual Mayor's Lei Day Celebration at Kapiolani Park in 2008, Honolulu set the record for the World's Longest Lei. Unofficially, the lei measured 5,336 feet in length, more than a mile.[11]
All of the major islands celebrate Lei Day, and each island is symbolized in pagentry by a specific type of lei and a color.
- Hawaiʻi: red, ʻōhiʻa lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha)
- Maui: pink, lokelani (Rosa damascena)
- Kahoʻolawe: gray or silver, hinahina (Heliotropium anomalum var. argentum)
- Lānaʻi: orange, kaunaʻoa (Cuscuta sandwichiana)
- Oʻahu: yellow or gold, ʻilima (Sida fallax)
- Molokaʻi: green, kukui (Aleurites moluccanus)
- Kauaʻi: purple, mokihana (Melicope anisata)
- Niʻihau: white, pūpū o Niʻihau (Niʻihau shells)
Gallery
- Prince Alexander Liholiho wearing a lei garland
- Queen Emma is wearing multiple strands of lei pūpū ʻo Niʻihau
- Hawaiian lei venders, c. 1901.
- Lei of plumeria flowers and 'umi'umi-o-dole (Spanish moss) on an outrigger canoe at a blessing.
References
- "Finding a lei-making class in Hawaii" Featured article in the Los Angeles Times.
- 1 2 "Symbolism". Flower Leis. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
- 1 2 3 4 "The Evolution of the Lei". Flower Leis. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
- ↑ http://www.mauimagazine.net/Maui-Magazine/July-August-2008/The-Flowers-of-Niihau/ The Flowers of Niihau by Sky Barnhart Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine June 08
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "The Different Types of Leis". Aloha Island Lei. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
- 1 2 3 4 "The History of the Lei". Flower Leis. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
- ↑ "A Custom of Aloha". Flower Leis. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
- ↑ "The Lei Tradition Continues". Aloha Island Lei. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
- ↑ Honolulu Star-Bulletin Local News
- ↑ A Hawaiian Sea Burial Company Home Page
- ↑ "A History of Lei Day" (PDF). Lei Day Celebration. City and County of Honolulu Department of Parks and Recreation. 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-09.
- ↑ Fischer, John. "Lei Day in Hawaii". About.com.
Further reading
- McDonald, Marie A. (1995). Ka Lei: The Leis of Hawaii. Ku Pa'a Publishing. ISBN 978-0-914916-32-1.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lei (Hawaii). |
- History of the Lei
- Na Lei o Hawai`i
- Lei History
- Leis over time
- Photo Gallery from Lei Day
- The Feather Lei A story by Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi about the art of feather lei making in Hawaii. Published by Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine Nov/Dec 2009.