|

ICONIC LEI. Sam Say, owner of M.P. Lei Shop, strings flowers to make
a lei at his shop in Chinatown in Honolulu. The vast majority of the
odorless orchids that tourists receive during their Hawai‘i vacations
are imported from Thailand, where it is cheaper to grow and string them
into the garlands synonymous with Hawaiian culture. Some Hawai‘i
lawmakers think the state should be doing more to help the producers of
lei made with locally grown, fragrant flowers. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)

Cindy Lau, owner of Cindy’s Lei Shoppe, poses for a portrait while
threading flowers onto string in Chinatown in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Mengshin
Lin)
From The Asian Reporter, V36, #4 (April 6, 2026), page 8.
That purple Hawai‘i vacation lei likely came from
Thailand, and some lawmakers want to change that
By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher
The Associated Press
HONOLULU — Dear Tourist: The flowers in that bright-purple lei you
received on your Hawai‘i vacation almost certainly weren’t grown in the
Aloha State.
The vast majority of those odorless orchids are imported from
Thailand, where it is cheaper to grow and string them into the garlands
synonymous with Hawaiian culture.
Some Hawai‘i lawmakers think the state should be doing more to help
the producers of lei made with locally grown, fragrant flowers. Ideas
include labelling requirements that would identify Hawai‘i-made garlands
and a prohibition on state agencies buying imported lei, though some
lei-sellers worry that such rules would make the garlands too expensive.
"You don’t come to Hawai‘i and not at least have a flower or a lei,"
said Kuhio Lewis, CEO of the Hawaiian Council, a nonprofit that promotes
Native Hawaiian culture and business. "For us to now be importing is not
good. It’s actually embarrassing."
Lei are synonymous with Hawai‘i
The custom of giving and wearing lei made of flowers, leaves, seeds,
or shells has always been associated with Hawaiian people, for whom the
garlands represent love or the spirit of "aloha." They were used not
just for ceremonies but worn in everyday life by everyone from chiefs to
children, according to a 2002 paper published by the University of
Hawai‘i.
Today, people in Hawai‘i give and receive lei for all kinds of
celebrations, including birthdays and promotions. High school, college,
and even elementary school graduates receive lei piled to the tops of
their heads, their faces slowly vanishing behind a rising wall of
flowers. Each year on the opening day of the legislature, lawmakers meet
a similar fate. Pregnant women are given open-ended strands, rather than
a closed necklace, because of a tradition that says the latter
represents the umbilical cord wrapping around their baby’s neck.
"We always are looking for ways that we can honor people through our
Indigenous cultures, which is giving lei," said state representative
Darius Kila, who is Native Hawaiian.
Because lei-giving is so ingrained in Hawai‘i, lawmakers are
constantly buying them and doling them out — at groundbreakings, to
honor constituents or volunteers, or for staffers’ birthdays, for
example.
An effort to regulate lei
Kila this year sponsored a bill, requested by the Hawaiian Council,
that would have required a certain percentage of lei purchased by state
officials to include flowers grown in-state. It also sought lei labels
telling customers where the flowers were grown.
That measure failed, but a related bill in the senate remains alive.
It would create a work group to study whether local flower-growers and
lei-makers can meet the rising demand for the garlands, and make
recommendations for protecting the local industry.
"The growing commercialization of lei and lei materials has led to
increased use of imported plant materials and manufactured components
that are marketed using Hawaiian language, imagery, and place names,"
the senate bill states. That "may mislead consumers and undermine local
growers, lei makers, and cultural practitioners."
There is a hierarchy to the flowers
As Hawai‘i’s population and tourism boomed in the 20th century,
lei-makers turned to nonnative ornamental plants such as carnations and
jasmine to meet soaring demand, and those are still some of the most
popular.
Kila, a Democrat from west Oahu, said he has a strict rule for
himself and his staff: "I really try not for us to give out orchid lei,
specifically the purple Thailand orchid lei."
While shopping for lei recently in Honolulu’s Chinatown, home to a
concentration of lei stands and flower shops, Kila sought out
puakenikeni — also known as the "10-cent flower," supposedly dating to
the days when lei cost a dime — as well as ginger and tuberose. The
blooms, which are not native, emit various degrees of jasmine-like
sweetness.
"People want pikake" — a type of jasmine, said Francis Wong, owner of
longtime Chinatown fixture Jenny’s Lei and Flowers. "That’s the top
flower in Hawai‘i."
Wong usually sources the aromatic white flowers from a farm in
Nanakuli, near Kila’s hometown. But there are seasonal shortages in
winter, he said.
Wong and his wife, Pickoun Wong, who strings flowers together in the
back of the store, have been renting the business for 18 years. They
sell Thailand orchids to give customers a cheaper option, especially
when local flowers are limited.
Locals always prefer local flowers, said Monty Pereira, general
manager of Watanabe Floral. But imported flowers help stretch limited
local supplies, he said. One popular lei blends Hawai‘i-grown tuberose
with imported carnations.
The Thailand-grown orchids also meet a demand for lei outside of
Hawai‘i, often from former residents who have moved to other states, he
said.
Concerns about cost
Watanabe Floral is Hawai‘i’s biggest florist. It sells some 250,000
lei per year, accounting for about a quarter of its business, Pereira
said.
He submitted testimony opposing Kila’s bill on purchasing parameters
for state agencies, saying it could unintentionally reduce overall lei
usage rather than strengthen the industry.
Restricting imported flowers could drive up the costs of lei, he said
in an interview.
"If like 30 lei stands and florists are fighting for the same lei,
that’s when lei is going to start to be $100, $150, $200," he said. Last
Mother’s Day, a three-strand pikake lei was going for $150.
And with the Trump administration’s tariffs, the Thailand orchid can
now cost about as much as some local flowers, he said.
Pereira, who is Native Hawaiian, worries that people are increasingly
turning to lei made with candy or ribbons rather than flowers, a style
especially common at graduations.
"The bigger threat is making it so expensive that the people of
Hawai‘i cannot afford to enjoy something that’s culturally significant
to us," he said.
Read the current issue of The Asian Reporter in
its entirety!
Just visit <www.asianreporter.com/completepaper.htm>!
|