Naka Nathaniel has returned to regular journalism after being the primary parent for his son. In those 13 years, his child has only been to the ER five times (three due to animal attacks.)
Before parenting, Naka was known as an innovative journalist. He was part of the team that launched NYTimes.com in 1996 and he led a multimedia team that pioneered many new approaches to storytelling.
On 9/11, he filmed the second plane hitting the South Tower. His footage aired on the television networks and a sequence was the dominant image on NYTimes.com.
While based in Paris for The New York Times, he developed a style of mobile journalism that gave him the ability to report from anywhere on the planet. He covered the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and was detained while working in Iran, Sudan, Gaza and China. He is one of a handful of Americans who has been in North Korea, but not South Korea. He worked in 60 countries and made The Times’s audience care about sex trafficking, climate change and the plight of women and children in the developing world.
Besides conflict, The Times also had Naka covering fashion shows, car shows and Olympics. He did all three of those events in the same week (Paris, Geneva and Turin) before going to Darfur to continue reporting on the genocide (it was the fifth of sixth trips to the region.)
Naka lives in Waimea on the Big Island and his writing for Civil Beat will initially focus on his reflections on moving home.
At Merrie Monarch, a kumu hula continually pushes for innovation in the ancient Hawaiian art.
The appetite for curtailing white-collar crimes committed in the islands is waning.
Earlier generations teased each other using racially based humor without malice. It helped people work together to make things better.
Traditional stories tell us how to live harmoniously in these islands.
The frontlines range from the road to Capitol meeting rooms, but it's the actions we take regardless of venue that make all the difference.
How do we keep the sadness of dying away from one’s homeland from befalling this generation of children?
People with long-standing ties to Hawaii are being pushed away. We seem close to the threshold of becoming a place where only the wealthy thrive.
But there's one thing the rich can't buy here — a sense of belonging.
Why is it so hard to be ultra wealthy in the right way in the Aloha State?