Lūʻau (Hawaiian festival) : The water is a Party traditional Hawaiian which is usually accompanied by meal, entertainment and music and dance traditional Hawaiian and Hula. Among Hawaiians, the concepts of water and Party are often mixed, which results in the graduation lūʻaus, marriage lūʻau, au baby lūʻau au Baptism water andanniversary. lūʻau. History of water: In the old Hawaii, men and women took their meal separately. In addition, women and the rest of society were not allowed to eat foodstuffs little common to foodstuffs which were only served during great occasions. However, in 1819, King Kamehameha II (*) suppressed all the religious laws then practiced. King Kamehameha (*) II performs a symbolic act, eating with the women, thus ending the Hawaiian religious system of kapu (taboo). It was at this time that the holidays water are created.
(*) King Kamehameha II, in Hawaiian: Kalaninui kua Liholiho i ke kapu ʻIolani, born under the name Liholiho on November 1, 1797 in Hilo and died on July 14, 1824 in London, is the second king of Hawaii on the death of his father, on May 8, 1819, until his death.