In the Hawaiian language and in Hawaiian Pidgin, a hapa is an individual of mixed ancestry, especially someone born in Hawaii. Used without qualification, it is often taken to mean "part-Hawaiian, part white". In the Hawaiian language, it can also simply mean half, part, or fragment.
Hapa can also be used as an adjective to describe anyone of mixed racial heritage. Another term used in the Hawaiian islands for someone of very mixed racial heritage is "chop suey". (This word was once common, but is less used these days.) Both words are used descriptively and would not be felt as slurs.
The word "hapa" is now used in the mainland United States to describe a person of partial Asian ethnicity. However, some Native Hawaiians dispute this usage, claiming that the word should only be used to describe people of partial Hawaiian ancestry.
The terms haole and popolo are often used as racial or ethnic slurs, sometimes descriptively. One should be careful using these terms.
Hapa-haole can also be used to describe anything hybrid. One common use is as the name of a type of Hawaiian music. The tune and styling are typically Hawaiian, but the lyrics are in English, or mostly in English.
External links
Hapas.com (http://www.hapas.com)
Realhapas.com (http://www.realhapas.com) - Site that claims "hapa" should only be used for people of partial Hawaiian ethnicity
Two Cultures, One Princess (http://www.erasofelegance.com/kaiulani.html)
Swirl - A Mixed Community (http://swirlinc.org)
Hapa Issues Forum (http://www.hapaissuesforum.org)
MixedFolks.com - Representing Multiracial People (http://www.mixedfolks.com)
Cornell Hapa Student Association (http://www.rso.cornell.edu/hapa/)
The Hapa Project - Exploring Hapa Identity (http://www.thehapaproject.com)
Half-Korean Online Community (http://www.halfkorean.com)
However at Hapa Culture, we like to embrace the term as a broader and more inclusive concept by involving any mix of cultural influences.
Hapa Culture's mission is to explore and celebrate the experiences of mixed cultures.
Hapa Culture is place where we celebrate our similarities and differences, reexamine the traditional notions of racial and cultural identity, and provide insights, answers, as well as questions.