- Currently Boston
- Posts
- Currently in Boston — August 11, 2023: A beauty of a day on Friday
Currently in Boston — August 11, 2023: A beauty of a day on Friday
Plus, how to support Native Hawaiians after the fires.
The weather, currently.
A beauty of a day on Friday
Showers come to an end overnight Thursday after a frontal system crosses the region. This will set us up for a beauty of a day on Friday. Some of these showers could contain heavier downpours but we will not see the extensive flooding we saw earlier this week.
Temperatures with the sunshine Friday afternoon will reach around 80° and you'll notice lower amounts of humidity in the air. As we head for Saturday it's also a nice day plenty of sunshine and temperatures in the mid '80s. I do think that skies will become partly sunny on Sunday and there may be a shower in the morning. It will still be a warm day.
What you need to know, currently.
This week’s firestorm on Maui is the latest climate disaster to utterly transform a place and its people in a matter of hours. It’s also now one of the deadliest wildfires in US history, with potentially worse news to come in the days ahead as rescuers continue to work in burned areas.
As more survivor footage emerges, it’s clear that what happened in Maui was absolutely hellish.
The fires are a “scorching warning” says Kaniela Ing, a seventh-generation Native Hawaiian, politician, and community organizer. “People hit first and worse by the climate crisis tend to be Black, indigenous and low income. Yet we’re the keepers of the knowledge of how to build a society that wouldn’t cause ecological collapse and societal doom.”
Hawaiian youth are leading a lawsuit against their state government for its role in accelerating the climate emergency in violation of their constitutional rights, and recently found out they will be the second constitutional climate case in US history to go to trial. (The first was earlier this year in Montana, which Currently covered here.)
We all have the ability and duty to demand a better world. If you’re feeling motivated to help Hawaii in this moment of crisis, please lend your support to youth-led and Native-led movements.
What you can do, currently.
The fires in Maui have struck at the heart of Hawaiian heritage, and if you’d like to support survivors, here are good places to start:
The fires burned through the capital town of the Kingdom of Hawaii, the ancestral and present home to native Hawaiians on their original unceded lands. One of the buildings destroyed was the Na ‘Aikane o Maui cultural center, a gathering place for the Hawaiian community to organize and celebrate.
As a Kānaka Maoli, stemming from seven generations here on Maui. This is heartbreaking to watch. Colonial greed is burning down our home. And it’s US politicians and polluters to blame. #ClimateEmergency
— Kaniela Ing (@KanielaIng)
6:08 PM • Aug 9, 2023
If you’d like to help the community rebuild and restore the cultural center, a fund has been established that is accepting donations — specify “donation for Na ‘Aikane” on this Venmo link.
Nā ‘Āikane O Maui Cultural Center has burnt down. It was a gathering place for Cultural Groups & Kīpuka for our Lāhui - everyone was fed & no one was ever charged. Cultural artifacts, and a safe gathering and educational space for our people has been lost. #Lahaina#LahainaFire/
— Oʻahu Water Protectors (@oahuWP)
8:20 PM • Aug 9, 2023