United States | Shaka backer

Hawaii may soon have America’s first official state gesture

It would join the shag, the whoopie pie and other state symbols across the country

A hand doing the shaka sign emerges from an island
Illustration: Sam Island
|Los Angeles

On May 1st Hawaiian legislators voted to send a bill to Governor Josh Green that would make the shaka—the “hang loose” gesture—a state symbol. Hawaiians and surfers use the hand signal (made by folding three fingers down while extending the thumb and little finger, and sometimes twisting the wrist) in many ways: to say aloha, for instance, or let someone pass while driving. “I would describe it as a symbol of happiness,” said Glenn Wakai, the state senator who introduced the bill. It sailed through the legislative process. If the governor signs it into law, it will be America’s first official state gesture.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Shaka backer”

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