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For some, it's a serious sport.
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For others, just a way to let loose.
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But despite its casual association
with fun and sun,
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surfing has a richer and deeper
history than many realize.
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What we today call surfing originated in
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the Polynesian islands
of the Pacific Ocean.
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We know from various accounts
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that wave riding was done
throughout the Polynesian Pacific,
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as well as in West Africa and Peru.
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But it was in the Hawaiian archipelago
in particular
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that surfing advanced the most,
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was best documented,
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and, unlike elsewhere in Polynesia,
persisted.
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And for the people of Hawaii,
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wave sliding was not
just a recreational activity,
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but one with spiritual
and social significance.
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Like much of Hawaiian society,
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nearly every aspect of surfing was
governed by a code of rules and taboos
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known as kapu.
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Hawaiians made offerings when selecting
a tree to carve,
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prayed for waves with the help
of a kahuna, or an expert priest,
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and gave thanks after surviving
a perilous wipeout.
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Certain surf breaks were strickly reserved
for the elite.
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But it wasn't just a solemn affair.
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Surfers competed and wagered
on who could ride the farthest,
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the fastest,
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or catch the biggest wave
with superior skill,
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granting respect,
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social status,
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and romantic success.
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Though it was later called
the sport of kings,
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Hawaiian men and women of all ages
and social classes participated,
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riding surfboards shaped from koa,
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breadfruit,
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or wiliwili trees.
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Many Hawaiians road alaia boards,
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which were thin, midsized,
and somewhat resemble today's shortboards.
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Some mounted paipo boards,
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short, round-nosed boards on which
riders typically lay on their stomachs.
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But only chieftains could ride
the massive olo boards,
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twice as long as today's longboards.
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Unlike most modern surfboards,
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all boards were finless,
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requiring surfers to drags their hands
or feet to turn.
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We don't know exactly when wave sliding
was invented,
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but we know that it had already
been practiced in Polynesia for centuries
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by the time it was described in 1777
by William Anderson,
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a surgeon on Captain Cook's ship
"Resolution."
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Although Anderson was in awe,
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most of the American Christian
missionaries who arrived in Hawaii
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several decades later
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regarded surfing as sinful,
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and they discouraged it, along with
other aspects of native culture.
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The biggest threat to surfing, however,
was the threat to the natives themselves.
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By 1890, new illnesses introduced
by Europeans and Americans
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had decimated the Hawaiian people,
leaving fewer than 40,000
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from a pre-contact population
that may have exceeded 800,000.
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At the same time, foreign influence grew
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with white settlers overthrowing
the native monarchy in 1893,
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and the U.S. annexing
the islands five years later.
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The end of Hawaii's independence coincided
with surfing's native-led revival,
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a revival soon exploited
by the American colonizers.
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But first, some Hawaiians
took surfing overseas.
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In 1907, George Freeth,
the so-called Hawaiian Wonder,
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traveled to the west coast
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and gave surfing demonstrations
in southern California.
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Then in 1914, Olympic swimmer
Duke Kahanamoku
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made his way to Australia and New Zealand,
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gliding across the southern Pacific waves
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and attracting rapt audiences
wherever he went.
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Shortly before Freeth went to California,
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a South Carolinian named
Alexander Hume Ford moved to Hawaii.
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After learning to surf, he became
a champion of the pastime.
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But Ford may have had unsavory reasons
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for his enthusiastic efforts
to boost the sport.
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Like many settlers, he wanted Hawaii
to become a U.S. state
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but was worried about its non-white
majority of natives and Asian workers.
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Ford thus promoted surfing
to attract white Americans to Hawaii,
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first as tourists, then as residents.
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He was helped by numerous writers
and filmmakers.
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Ford's demographic plan
would fail miserably.
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Hawaii became a state in 1959
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and remains the most racially diverse
state in the country.
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But the promotion of surfing
was a far greater success.
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Today, surfing is a multi-billion dollar
global industry,
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with tens of millions
of enthusiasts worldwide.
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And though relatively few of these surfers
are aware of the once-crucial wave chants
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or board carving rituals,
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Hawaiians continue to preserve
these traditions
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nearly washed away by history's waves.