The Link Between Hawaii and The Slippah
Posted by Elijah Shaw on
From its globally famous surf breaks like the North Shore to its ubiquitous spirit of Aloha, Hawaii is known the world over for its all-encompassing surf culture. The rubber slipper, as it is termed in Hawaii, has become ingrained throughout the culture of Hawaii, so much so that some of its residents vow never to wear shoes again. In December of 2011, Hana Hou!, the official magazine of Hawaiian Airlines published a piece on the history of the slippah in Hawaii (full article can be read here.) They open the article with the following: "Hawai‘i does not wear flip-flops. This might be news to you if you’re from the Mainland, but it’s true. Hawai‘i does not wear thongs, either, at least not on its feet. It does not wear jandals, as they do in New Zealand, and it does not wear slipslops, as they do in South Africa...Nor does it wear flip-flaps, flips, slaps or anything like that...What Hawai‘i wears, and what the rest of the world calls by so many other names, is the rubber slipper—or even more correctly, the rubbah slippah." They go on to state, "The name is important because the slipper is important."