Peace Movement Aotearoa   Military Spending   Indigenous Peoples' Rights   Noho Hewa

'Noho Hewa', with Anne Keala Kelly
Visit to Aotearoa, and how to order 'Noho Hewa'


Native Hawaiian filmmaker, Anne Keala Kelly, visited Aotearoa in 2014 for two screenings of the award winning documentary 'Noho Hewa: the wrongful occupation of Hawai'i', a powerful portrayal of the multiple links between militarisation and the historical and ongoing processes of colonisation.

Please scroll down this page for information about 'Noho Hewa' and Ms Kelly, her visit, how you can order 'Noho Hewa' at a special reduced price in Aotearoa New Zealand, media coverage, and contact information.

"A brilliant, incisive, and complex expose of colonialism (American and other) and its devastating effects on Kanaka Maoli, the indigenous people of Hawaii, and their land." - Author, poet, scholar and painter Albert Wendt


"Through �Noho Hewa�, Kelly has carefully illustrated how the militarisation of Hawai�i both produces and is enabled by broader processes of land alienation, indigenous social dislocation, and late capitalism." - Review by Dr Teresia Teaiwa, Senior Lecturer, Va'aomanu Pasifika, Victoria University, author, and poet

Full size image

'Noho Hewa: The Wrongful Occupation of Hawai'i' is a documentary by Native Hawaiian journalist, writer, and filmmaker Anne Keala Kelly. The film was directed, shot, and edited by Ms Kelly, and took over six years to make as an independently funded project. The documentary features interviews with Native Hawaiian academics and activists and some extraordinary original footage documenting both the relentless expansion of the militarised occupation and the determined resistance of Native Hawaiians. Sound track music by Sudden Rush, Billy Bragg, Jon Osorio, Black Square, and Kamehameha Projects reinforces the emotional impact of Kelly's story, and demonstrates the beauty and power of social and political commentary through the arts.

Awards ~ Grand Festival Award for Documentary, Berkeley Video and Film Festival 2011 ~ Special Jury Prize, Pacific International Documentary Film Festival 2010 ~ Best Documentary Film, Hawaii International Film Festival 2008 (unfinished edition).

Anne Keala Kelly is a Hawaiian filmmaker who documented the Hawaiian sovereignty movement during the first decade of the 21st century. As a journalist, she has covered Hawaiian and other indigenous peoples issues and the environment, and in 2006-07 she was a Ted Scripps Fellow at the Center For Environmental Journalism in Boulder, Colorado. She has filed stories from Hawaii, where she lives, as well as Geneva and Katmandu for the Pacifica Network�s Free Speech Radio News. Her print journalism has appeared in The Nation, Indian Country Today, The Honolulu Weekly and other publications, and her video reporting has been featured on 'The NewsHour' with Jim Lehrer and Democracy Now! In September 2008 Ms Kelly co-produced 'The Other Hawaii' for Al Jazeera. She has an MFA in Directing from UCLA.

How to order the 'Noho Hewa' DVD

Media coverage of Ms Kelly's 2014 visit

Screening in Auckland: Friday, 25 April 2014
    Peace Movement Aotearoa, in association with WILPF Aotearoa and the Pacific Media Centre (AUT), presents 'Noho Hewa' with filmmaker Anne Keala Kelly. On the opening night of the WILPF Aotearoa Militarisation in the Pacific regional meeting, Native Hawaiian filmmaker, Anne Keala Kelly, will introduce and discuss her documentary 'Noho Hewa' - a powerful portrayal of the multiple links between militarisation and the historical and ongoing processes of colonisation.

    At 6.30pm, 9th floor, Sir Paul Reeves Building (WG), Mayoral Drive, AUT, Auckland (entry via Mayoral Drive plaza). For more information, please email Peace Movement Aotearoa. RSVP on Facebook; the A4 poster for this screening is available here.

Screening in Wellington: Friday, 2 May 2014

    Peace Movement Aotearoa, in association with the Film Archive, presents 'Noho Hewa' with filmmaker Anne Keala Kelly. Native Hawaiian filmmaker, Anne Keala Kelly, will introduce and discuss her documentary 'Noho Hewa' - a powerful portrayal of the multiple links between militarisation and the historical and ongoing processes of colonisation.

    From 6pm to 8.20pm, NZ Film Archive, corner Taranaki and Ghuznee Streets, Wellington - entry by donation to the Film Archive. For more information, please email Peace Movement Aotearoa. RSVP on Facebook; the A4 poster for this screening is available here.

Contact details

    Ms Kelly is available for interview in Auckland from Thursday, 24 April to Sunday, 27 April; and in Wellington from Tuesday, 29 April to Friday, 2 May. For all enquiries about Ms Kelly's visit or for more information about the 'Noho Hewa' screenings, please contact Peace Movement Aotearoa: tel 04 382 8129, email Peace Movement Aotearoa


Noho Hewa   Military Spending   Indigenous Peoples' Rights   Peace Movement Aotearoa