$100M will be left for Native Hawaiian causes from the estate of an heiress considered last princess

FILE - Paula Akana, left, executive director of ʻIolani Palace, and Hailama Farden, of Hale O Nā Aliʻi O Hawaiʻi, a royal Hawaiian society, leave a news conference Monday, Dec. 12, 2022, at the palace in Honolulu, after announcing the death of Abigail Kinoiki Kekaulike Kawānanakoa at the age of 96. There will be at least $100 million leftover to fund Native Hawaiian causes from the estate of the so-called last Hawaiian princess who died last year. (AP Photo/Jennifer Sinco Kelleher, File)

HONOLULU (AP) — In life, Abigail Kawānanakoa embodied the complexities of Hawaii: Many considered her a princess — a descendant of the royal family that once ruled the islands.

But she was also the great-granddaughter of a sugar baron and inherited vast wealth thanks to Westerners who upended traditional ways of life through the introduction of private property and the diversion of water for industrial plantations.

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