''Holehole bushi'' were work songs sung by Japanese workers on Hawaiian sugar plantations. They take their name from the Hawaiian word for sugarcane leaves, ''holehole'', a word which could also refer to the arduous process of removing the leaves from the stalks. These were not traditional folk songs people brought with them from Japan, but rather ones they invented in Hawaii, with lyrics speaking specifically of the grueling work and life on the plantations. | ''Holehole bushi'' were work songs sung by Japanese workers on Hawaiian sugar plantations. They take their name from the Hawaiian word for sugarcane leaves, ''holehole'', a word which could also refer to the arduous process of removing the leaves from the stalks. These were not traditional folk songs people brought with them from Japan, but rather ones they invented in Hawaii, with lyrics speaking specifically of the grueling work and life on the plantations. |