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ADMISSIONS ATTACKED. Kapua Ong works on math homework at her home in
Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Ong attends Kamehameha Schools, which was founded by
the will of Bernice Pauahi Bishop, the great-granddaughter of King
Kamehameha I. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)

POLICY TARGETED. Kapua Ong, second from right, poses for a family
portrait with her parents and sister in Honolulu. Kapua Ong is one of
more than 5,400 students enrolled across three Kamehameha campuses on
Oahu, Maui, and the Big Island. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)
From The Asian Reporter, V35, #8 (October 6, 2025), pages 7 &
13.
Private school for Native Hawaiians vows to defend
admissions policy from conservative strategist
By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher
The Associated Press
HONOLULU — After water polo practice at her school atop a hill
overlooking Honolulu Harbor, Kapua Ong marvels at the sunset.
"I do feel proud of myself for getting in because not everyone gets
accepted," said Kapua, 14, a freshman at Kamehameha Schools, a
competitive private school with affordable tuition that gives preference
to Native Hawaiians. "I’m just, like, grateful for being able to have
those opportunities."
Kapua was just a baby when her parents set the stage for her
acceptance at the school by adding details of her Native Hawaiian
ancestry to a genealogy database. As an incoming seventh grader, she
also took an admissions test and highlighted her kung fu skills and
fluency in the Hawaiian language.
Kamehameha Schools gives admissions preference to the Indigenous
people of Hawai‘i, with a caveat: "to the extent permitted by law."
A campaign is underway to test the policy’s legality and stop
Kamehameha from favoring Hawaiians, part of a movement to expand the
legal definition of racial discrimination in education. Conservative
activists have been emboldened by a Supreme Court ruling against
affirmative action in college admissions and by the Trump
administration’s war against diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).
Now, they’re targeting scholarships, academic programs, and admissions
policies tied directly or indirectly to race.
Students for Fair Admissions, led by Edward Blum, a leading opponent
of affirmative action, set up a website in September vowing to challenge
Kamehameha’s admissions policy in court. "It is essentially impossible
for a non-Native Hawaiian student to be admitted to Kamehameha," the
site says.
Alumni, parents, and local leaders are urging the private school
system with an endowment valued at more than $15 billion — larger than
most universities — to fight to defend the policy.
"I’m hoping they hire a good lawyer, build a good case," said Andria
Tupola, a 1998 graduate and a member of the Honolulu City Council. She
says the school helped her build a stronger connection to Hawaiian
culture.
Attending Kamehameha can also be life-changing. The Native Hawaiian
community struggles with higher rates of poverty and incarceration, so
Hawaiian children may have educational disadvantages. Admission to
Kamehameha offers a chance for quality private school education — with
boundless opportunities, first-class facilities, and Hawaiian cultural
values.
Along with a breathtaking ocean view, the sprawling Honolulu campus
boasts top amenities — an Olympic-sized pool, buffet lunches, athlete
laundry service, and grounds adorned with native plants. An annual,
elaborate Hawaiian song contest between high school classes is broadcast
on local TV.
A Hawaiian princess’s will
Kamehameha Schools was founded by the will of Bernice Pauahi Bishop,
the great-granddaughter of King Kamehameha I. When she died in 1884, her
will directed the establishment of schools that give preference to
Native Hawaiians. The endowment also supports scholarships to other
private schools, plus community activities.
Last year, more than 5,400 students enrolled across three Kamehameha
campuses on Oahu, Maui, and the Big Island.
Each year, the number of applications exceeds the number of spaces by
as much as 17 to 1, depending on the campus and grade, the Kamehameha
website says.
There’s an understanding among Hawai‘i residents that only students
with Hawaiian blood will be admitted. Many see the policy as a way to
remedy disparities stemming from U.S. colonization and the 1893
overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom by a group of American businessmen.
Sterling Wong, a Kamehameha spokesperson, declined to say how many
non-Hawaiian students have been admitted.
Kalani Rosell was the first non-Hawaiian to graduate from Kamehameha
Schools Maui in 2007. His acceptance drew sharp criticism from
Hawaiians. The school said he had been selected after a list of
qualified Hawaiian students had been exhausted.
More than 15,000 people protested after a 2005 ruling by a panel of
the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the policy of
restricting admission to Hawaiians, ruling it violated federal civil
rights law. Kamehameha sought a rehearing.
The following year, the court upheld the policy. Kamehameha later
settled with the family of the white student who brought the case when
he was denied admission.
"We anticipated that our nearly 140-year-old admissions policy,
providing preference to Native Hawaiian children, would again be
challenged," Kamehameha trustees said in a statement. "We are confident
that our policy aligns with established law."
"Heavy hitter" takes on the Hawaiian schools
When Kekoa Kealoha, who graduated in 2003, heard about the campaign
against the school, he was shocked to hear it was led by "somebody who
was, like, a real heavy hitter."
Students for Fair Admissions sued Harvard and the University of North
Carolina in cases that led to the landmark 2023 Supreme Court decision
barring colleges from considering race in admissions decisions.
Blum, a former stockbroker, has since expanded his opposition to
racial preferences throughout education, fuelled by President Donald
Trump’s fight against DEI.
Reached by The Associated Press, Blum said he was travelling and
asked for written questions. Then, he didn’t respond.
Blum’s group probably will argue the Kamehameha policy is unlikely to
survive the strongest form of constitutional review because it has an
absolute race-based requirement for admissions, said John Tehranian, a
professor at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles.
Kamehameha could counter that its policy is not race-based, but a
classification based on political status, drawing on cases that allow
government programs for Native Americans, he said.
Blum’s group is going after anything related to race and "seeing what
sticks," said Natasha Warikoo, a professor at Tufts University, who
wrote a book about affirmative action.
Though the Supreme Court decision focused on university admissions,
conservatives have increasingly targeted K-12 schools, along with
admissions factors they consider "proxies" for race, including family
income and neighborhood.
For instance, in July, the conservative Pacific Legal Foundation
filed a lawsuit challenging an admissions policy at Boston Public
Schools’ elite exam schools that gives students additional points if
they’re from lower-income areas.
Hawaiian Republican calls campaign ‘racist’
When Blum launched his campaign against Kamehameha, people started
calling Brenton Awa, a Hawaiian Republican state senator.
Awa didn’t get into Kamehameha and graduated from a public school,
but he called Blum anyway. When Blum didn’t call back, Awa and another
Republican flew to the East Coast to find him.
"If anybody had a chance at discussion, it would be us," Awa said.
The Arlington, Virginia, address on the website led the duo to just a
mailbox. They went to an office for Blum’s attorneys but had no luck. So
they met with Republicans in Washington to educate them about
Kamehameha’s mission.
"Anybody going after Kamehameha Schools with this kind of initiative
and intention, to us that’s racist," Awa said.
Moving to Hawai‘i for "life-changing" school
Kona Purdy and his family moved back to Hawai‘i in 2021, partly
because his daughter was accepted to Kamehameha. The family had moved to
Las Vegas, joining many Hawaiians who could no longer afford to live on
the islands.
They were forced to move back to Vegas in 2023 when they lost their
housing. "We had considered leaving her ... so that she could stay in
the school," Purdy said. "It was life-changing."
Kamehameha only charged the family about $100 in tuition.
The family returned to Hawai‘i in June. Purdy’s daughter is now a
seventh grader at a public school.
She will apply to Kamehameha next year, hoping to rejoin for high
school.
"Hopefully, the admissions policy is still in place so she has the
best shot," Purdy said.
Associated Press education writer Collin Binkley contributed.
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