
Haunani-Kay Trask is a riveting
public speaker, indigenous leader, and human rights
organizer in her Native land of Hawai‘i.
She has spoken at venues across the Pacific, including
New Zealand and Australia, in the United States
and Canada, in Europe, including at the United
Nations in Geneva, the Human Rights forum in Strasbourg,
and the Basque country in Spain, and in Africa
at the World Conference Against Racism in Durban,
South Africa.
For the past twenty years,
Trask has enlightened audiences about conditions
facing indigenous peoples, including the global
struggle for human rights. Described by the San
Francisco Examiner as the “radical firebrand,
feminist author and native daughter of royal blood
who is one of the leaders of a growing sovereignty
movement in Hawai‘i,” Trask was ranked
one of the top Native leaders in a 2001 poll taken
by The Honolulu Advertiser.
Trask has authored four books,
including the bestseller, From a Native Daughter:
Colonialism and Sovereignty in Hawai‘i.
Alice Walker has called the book, “A masterpiece
on decolonization,” that is “so powerful,
it will change the way you think about Hawai‘i
and all the lands seized by force forever.”