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Students for Fair Admissions, led by Edward Blum, vows to sue Kamehameha Schools over its admissions policy favoring Native Hawaiians, claiming non-Native students face near-impossible entry.
Founded by Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop's will, the school with a $15 billion endowment prioritizes Indigenous Hawaiians to remedy colonization disparities.
Student Kapua Ong, 14, credits genealogy database for acceptance, enjoying top amenities.
Alumni like Andria Tupola defend the policy for cultural connection.
Blum, post-Supreme Court affirmative action win, expands to K-12.
Kamehameha trustees affirm legality.
Past challenges include a 2005 ruling struck down, later upheld in 2006.
Blum argues absolute race-based requirement; school counters political status like Native American programs.
Experts like John Tehranian and Natasha Warikoo note broader anti-DEI push.
Hawaiian Republican Brenton Awa calls it racist, educating D.C.
peers.
Families like Kona Purdy's relocated for opportunities, paying minimal tuition.
Protests in 2005 supported the policy.
This case tests educational equity, potentially reshaping preferences.
Blum's silence leaves strategy unclear.
Hawaiian communities rally, viewing it as reparative.
The debate echoes U.S.
colonization's legacy, with higher Native Hawaiian poverty rates.
As litigation looms, implications for scholarships and programs widen.
This story from Associated Press highlights tensions between equality and historical redress.
2025-09-17 14:49:00



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