Sally-Jo Bowman ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF SERVITUDE A cloud of blue bus exhaust obscures my view for a moment. Then, above the Hawaii capitol across Beretania Street I see eight stripes with a corner Union Jack-the flag of the Hawaiian Nation. For the first time in a centu- ry, it flies alone. John Waihe'e, the first state governor of Native ancestry, struck the Stars and Stripes last Jan. 14-17 to mark the centennial of the saddest time in Hawaiian hearts. A hundred years ago a dozen mostly-American business- men lusting for more profits colluded with the U.S. minister to the Kingdom of Hawaii to overthrow the Queen. To avoid bloodshed, Lili'uokalani yielded to U.S. Minister John Stevens as 162 American troops rattled their bayonets across from her palace. She expected the U.S. to restore her to power as soon as Washington learned the truth. In fact, President Cleveland's investigator did find the seizure of the kingdom illegal and ill-advised, but expan- sionist William McKinley was elected before Cleveland could do anything. Hawaiians, dispossessed and disen- franchised, entered a hundred years of servitude. I am Hawaiian. Like some, [ am Island-born but live in the continental U.S. Like most, I am of mixed blood. Our cordial ancestors married strangers from all shores. But they were too trusting of those strangers who thought aloha’aina—living in harmony with the land and the sea— was a waste of resources that could be plundered for profit and power. 132