Mililani Trask

Mililani B. Trask
Born Mililani Bernardette Trask
Honolulu, Hawaii, US
Occupation Indigenous Consultants LLC (2009-Present), Executive Director, Gibson Foundation (1988-2004), Consultant to World Indigenous Peoples

Mililani Trask is a leader of the Hawaiian Sovereignty Movement and a political speaker and attorney. One of Trask's contributions to the Hawaiian sovereignty movement was her founding of Na Koa Ikaika o Ka Lāhui Hawaiʻi, a native Hawaiian non-governmental organization.[1]

Outside of Hawaiʻi, Trask has worked with the United Nations to aid indigenous people from around the world seeking independence. She was a member of the Indigenous Initiative for Peace, helped author the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and was elected vice chair of the General Assembly of Nations of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization.[2] For seven years, she worked and studied under the guidance of Mother Teresa of Calcutta.[3] She is the younger sister of activist and writer, Professor Haunani-Kay Trask.[1]

Education

Licensure

Professional Positions

Early Works with Indigenous Peoples

In October 1993, Ms. Trask was invited to become a member of the prestigious Indigenous Initiative for Peace (IIP), a global body of indigenous leaders convened by Nobel Laureate Rigoberta Menchu-Tum, the United Nations Goodwill Ambassador to the UN Decade on Indigenous Peoples. Since that time, Ms. Trask has worked in the global arena for passage of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. In this respect, Ms. Trask attended and participated in the United National Global Consultations in Cairo, Beijing, Copenhagen and Vienna as a Pacific Delegate to the indigenous caucus.

In 1995, Ms. Trask was elected the second Vice Chair of the General Assembly of Nations of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), an international body composed of the unrecognized nations of the world. UNPO was founded in 1991 by his holiness, the Dalai Lama, as an alternative forum to the United Nations. Ms. Trask assumed the position vacated by Ken Sarowira, the Ogoni human rights' advocate, who was killed by the Nigerian Government.

Ms. Trask is a founding member of the Indigenous Women's Network, a coalition of Native American Women whose work includes community based economic development, social justice, human rights, housing and health.

Ms. Trask is an acknowledged Peace advocate and has studied and worked for seven years with Mother Teresa of Calcutta. Ms. Trask is the Convener for a Native Hawaiian NGO entitled Na Koa Ikaika o Ka Lahui Hawaii and the Director of an NGO ECO-SOC, Indigenous World Association, that has worked in the international arena on the Draft Declaration for Indigenous Peoples and the World Conference on Racism for 18 years.

From 1987-1998, Ms. Trask served and the Interim and elected Kia'aina (Governor/Prime Minister) of Ka Lahui Hawaii, the Native Hawaiian Nation, with a citizenry of over 20,000 Hawaiians. From 1998 – 2000, Ms. Trask was elected to the Office of Hawaiian Affairs as Trustee at Large. Ms. Trask has served as the Executive Director of the Gibson Foundation from 1987 to present, a private, non-profit dedicated to assisting Native Hawaiians with housing issues, and housing programs.

In 2001, Ms. Trask was nominated and appointed as the Pacific representative to Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues to serve a three-year term beginning Jan. 1, 2002. Ms. Trask was appointed to the position by the President of the Economic Social Council of the United Nations and is currently considered an indigenous expert to the United Nations in international and human rights law.

Formation of Ka Lahui Hawai'i

Trask returned to Hawaii and joined the growing native struggle over land control and development. She began community organizing on sovereignty issues, setting up conferences and workshops and doing extensive legal research into native land claims. In 1987, Trask and others founded the group Ka Lahui Hawai'i (the Hawaiian People). Ka Lahui is a self-proclaimed sovereign Hawaiian nation with over ten thousand members; a democratic constitution with a bill of rights; and four branches of government—including an elected legislature (the Pakaukau), representing thirty-three districts, and a judiciary system made up of elected judges and an elders council. Voting is restricted to those with Hawaiian blood. (Native Hawaiians are the 220,000 people of Hawaiian ancestry in the state, of whom about 10,000 are pure-blooded.) Trask has twice been elected kia'aina of the group, the equivalent of governor or prime minister. Trask hopes the nation will eventually be rooted in the nearly two hundred thousand acres of Hawaiian homelands and the 1.4 million acres of original Hawaiian lands ceded to the state by the federal government. In Ka Lahui Hawai'i, according to Trask, native Hawaiians would have a relationship similar to that existing between the United States and federally recognized Native American tribes and native Alaskans. The tribes, whose members have dual status as citizens of the United States and as "citizens" of the tribe, can impose taxes, make laws, and control their lands.

Community-Based Renewable Energy

In 2004, Ms. Trask started working extensively with New Zealand and Hawai'i based energy initiatives to bring affordable, clean, renewable energy to indigenous communities. She was crucial in developing a "Native-to-Native" model with Hawai'i based company, Innovations Development Group. She served as a consultant, ensuring that these energy initiatives put people before profits, safeguarded human rights, and respected cultural protocols. Ms. Trask has moved significant legislation that brought attention to the fact that mineral assets like geothermal are publicly owned and that all the people in Hawai'i should benefit from it. As a prior member of the International Indigenous Caucus on Biodiversity, she strongly advocated for indigenous peoples relative to their land and other natural resources on the United Nations Permanent Forum Focal Point on Human Rights and Health, as well as in her own community in Hawai'i.

Public & Professional Accomplishments

Pro-bono Community Positions

Honors, Appointments, Community Recognition

United Nations Consultations

Presentations, Conferences and Guest Lectures

References

  1. 1 2 Tourism and indigenous people: a resource guide. Ecumenical Coalition on Third World Tourism. 1995. p. 12. OCLC 35021069.
  2. Tsai, Michael (July 2, 2006). "Mililani Trask". The Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
  3. Burchett, Elisa (November 22, 2006). "Elisa Burchett asks, 'Will African Group Proposal Derail Entire Indigenous Declaration Process?'". U.N. Observer. Retrieved 4 February 2010.
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