‘You can just feel the love that’s being poured into each and every backpack’

Hundreds of Lahaina families picked up free backpacks filled with school supplies Thursday as their keiki prepare to return to West Maui campuses next week.

More than 800 backpacks were distributed by the Hawaiʻi State Teachers Association (HSTA) and Kamehameha Schools at a community event sponsored by the Hawaiʻi State Department of Education at The Westin Maui Resort & Spa, Kāʻanapali.

HSTA Vice President Logan Okita said, “We’re here to stand with the community, and we’re here to support our teachers, because ultimately, it supports our students and our community, and it helps us to make sure that everybody will thrive.”

The partnership between HSTA and Kamehameha Schools took shape after the Aug. 8 wildfires destroyed King Kamehameha III Elementary School and temporarily closed three others: Lahainaluna High, Lahaina Intermediate, and Princess Nahiʻenaʻena Elementary.

Okita explained, “We had a chance to talk about what students needed to feel comfortable and safe and loved as they go back to school, and so we came up with the idea of filling backpacks with school supplies.”

Kamehameha Schools provided the school supplies and secured a donation of 3,000 backpacks from Lands’ End. Then in September, dozens of volunteers — which included teachers and retirees, and HSTA and Kamehameha Schools staff — gathered at Windward Mall on Oʻahu to fill the backpacks with supplies, pack them into boxes, and load them onto a Matson shipping container.

HSTA Vice President Okita said, “You can just feel the love that’s being poured into each and every backpack by our retirees and the HSTA staff members and our Kamehameha Schools ʻohana. It’s amazing to feel just how much love is being put into these backpacks, and hopefully the students and community feel it when they receive them from us.”

Each backpack also includes a special handmade card created by keiki and ‘ohana who participate in one of the many community programs supported by Kamehameha Schools.

Kalei Kailihiwa, Kamehameha Schools Director of Community Engagement, said, “We asked them to take some time, create a handwritten card that demonstrates the care, the aloha that communicates to kids and families in Lahaina that we’re here for you today, tomorrow, and always.”

More than 400 backpacks with supplies were distributed prior to Thursday’s community event. Two hundred backpacks were delivered to Ke Kula Kaiapuni ma Lahaina (Lahaina-area Hawaiian language immersion schools). Nearly 200 more were provided to displaced Lahainaluna High students at Kūlanihākoʻi High in Kihei, and several dozen were distributed to displaced Lahaina students who transferred into private schools.

“We care deeply about our communities, our keiki, and our ʻohana, and we know that having something as simple as a backpack that you can add your own name to can add to the sense of familiarity, comfort and stability that we know is so important to kids and families today,” said Kailihiwa. “Coming together with the Hawaiʻi State Teachers Association was an important way, a simple way that we could help and aid in the recovery of our Lahaina communities.”

The remaining backpacks will be available for distribution by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), The Westin Maui Resort & Spa, and Lahaina-area schools.

HSTA and Kamehameha Schools extend a heartfelt mahalo to community sponsors Lands’ End, Windward Mall, and Matson for their kōkua.