Issue 11 1
Issue 11 1
Issue 11 1
T h e T e R a w h i t i N e w s l e t t e r
P ip iw h a r a u r o a T h e H e r a ld o f S p r in g
At the end of the day Nanny’s call would reverberate around the
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bays “Waiana, Darrell, Jodie”; it was time to go home to a
scrubbing brush and a bar of soap to wash away the ‘taapa’ that
seemed forever embedded in our feet. The day would be completed
with all of us cuddling our Grandmother trying very hard not to go
to sleep whilst she recited her hour long karakia; we needed to be
awake to confirm ‘Amine’ lest we got the dreaded clip across the
ear! That was some of our awesome upbringing and my precious
memories. There are many more.
Now I have children of my own. Pagen 21, Johan 16, Cherish 15,
Darrell-Rose 9 and we have a kuri, Pride, who is 10. I work for a
Primary Healthcare Organisation in the Franklin region as a
Community Health Coordinator linking our Maori and Pacific Island
clients and our clients who live in low socio economic areas into
services to better meet their health and social needs.
I get a great deal of satisfaction working with our Maori people and
I am passionate in my job to advocate for the betterment of our
Maori. I recently graduated with a Post Graduate Diploma in
Business in Maori Development. I started that journey because I
realised if I wanted my kids to go to University, then I had better
lead by example! I plan on going back to do more study next year.
Since I’ve had children, it’s important to me to take them home as
often as I can so that they can know and experience their whanau,
their marae, their whenua and their moana. So they can then create
their own memories and begin to understand when they have their
own children how very important it is to continue with traditions.
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Ngapuhi is the largest iwi. It has been given only 4 weeks and 3 days for its
hearings. All the evidence has been very interesting and some of the
questioning a bit laboured and the questioners should have been stopped
when they made their point.
Direct negotiation means the process may be quicker but this is not
necessarily so. Also, all the claims are put together under the Ngapuhi banner
and the claims we have for our rohe are claimed under Ngapuhi. Our hapu
don’t have to appear. Someone else speaks for us.
Giving our own evidence to the Tribunal means our voice is heard for our own
claims. The process may take a longer time. We may still not get a positive
settlement.
Takutai Moana is the group which has the coastal hapu in it. They want their
voice heard because it is their rohe which inland Ngapuhi will be using to
negotiate with and argue about. It is a powerful group because of its whenua
and moana.
There was a meeting at Te Tii on Saturday 21st August at 10am to discuss the
next steps. They do not want direct negotiations.
Lamorna, Chris, Blair and his youngest, Neil, Peti, Uncle Joe.
Mum met my dad, Neil Rogers, in the air force, and they moved to
Dad’s home, the South Island, and raised their family there – me
and my brothers Chris and Blair. Chris, Blair and I have all travelled
and lived overseas for long periods of time: Chris in Australia and
Slovenia, Blair in Australia, France and now Reunion Island (a
French-speaking island off the coast of Africa) and me in England,
Finland, France, Germany and Australia.
Living in Sydney is very different from that quiet life. I work at the
Reserve Bank of Australia as an economist – lots of number
crunching and reading, worrying about financial risks for ordinary
people and for companies. Most of Chris’s children are also here –
kia ora Fabe who has made the move back across the ditch – and it
is always great to spend time with them.
set date.
Pipiri :June: Hune
In June, the frosts usually start. Pipiri also means 'cling together' due to
the cold.
Hereturi-Koka-August: Akuhata
Kua kitea te kainga a te ahi I nga turi o te tangata.
The scorching effect of fire on the knees of man is seen.
Mahuru-September: Hepetema
Kua pumahana te whenua, me nga otaota, me nga Rakau.
The earth has now acquired warmth, as also have herbage and trees.
Whiringa-nuku:October: Oketopa
Kua tino mahana te whenua. The earth has now become quite warm.
Whiringa-rangi: November:Noema
Kua raumati, kua kaha te ra. It has now become summer and the sun has
acquired strength.
Hui-tangaru: February:Pepuera
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Kua tau te waewae o Ruhi kai te whenua. The foot pf Ruhi (a summer star)
now rests upon the earth. It is mid-summer.
Haratua:May:Mei
Kua uru nga kai ki te rua, kua mutu nga mahi a te tangata.
Crops have now been stored in the store pits. The tasks of man are
finished.
Te mutunga o te tau / The end of the year
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Whakatauki
E kore e taea te oranga mo te tangata, i te aroha me te pipi
anake.
We can no longer live on love and pipi
This saying is an example of how whakatauki are still being composed and
passed on today. Sir James Henare is reported to have said this at a
Kaikohe meeting on the future of the Maori people in Taitokerau in July
1985. It is sure to be quoted again and again. It refers to the need to
adjust to change in Te Ao Hurihuri - the world moving on.
Kelly and Warwick in the middle-and doesn’t she look like Puawai!!
Their children are front row: second from the left, Melanie; third from
right, Jennifer; and second from right her son, Phillip (and isn’t he a
Heke?)
When Helen invited me to submit a personal interest article for Pipiwharauroa I leapt
at the opportunity, the only criteria I had to fulfill were my;
Past - my roots related to Rawhiti and
Present - my journey to what has become of me today.
Oh, there was an unspoken criteria................keep it short! ha.
I was born in Rawhiti in1955 in a generation now labelled the “Baby Boomers”. It was
an era of significance, for myself the emergence of Beatlemania, Motown Sound and
notable worldwide figures like JFK and Martin Luther King come to mind.
I am the first born of Puawai Tenana (aka Blossom/Blossy) and soon after adopted
by my grandmother Ani Pihema Heke and living happily together with older brothers
Dennie and Guy in Henderson. It is with deep sadness the aforementioned are no
longer with us today along with so many of our wonderful loved ones, kuias and
kaumatuas from Rawhiti.
Today my wonderful partner Warwick, a pakeha from Orakei and our 17yr old son
Phillip are relishing our sea change lifestyle and living down on the south west coast
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of Western Australia, in Busselton. We used to have a gorgeous yellow canary who
delighted us with its sweet trill throughout the day, until he met his demise falling off
the perch. Warwick’s interest is in antiques and enjoys his part time work at the local
auctions otherwise, often seen on the bowling greens. Phillip is in his final year at
school.
I have been working as a part time nurse and educator at our local hospital for
fourteen years, the second largest health service provider in the south- west region.
Fortunately I was hospital trained at Greenlane Hospital in the early 1970’s, those
fundamental skills learnt in many multidisciplinary areas has equipped me to mentor
university nursing graduates during their practical rotations in hospitals.
One of the many challenges facing us in our clinical setting is increased number of
admissions diagnosed with depression. Circumstances are varied yet real, grief from
loss of a partner or loved one and loneliness has been the norm. In the current
climate due to recent financial market downturn you can add redundancies or
unemployment, domestic violence, the homeless, alcohol/drug abuse and the list is
endless. Sadly, the patients we see are pre-baby boomers and all generations to the
current “Gen Y’s”.
Rangimarie Heke
Sea grass, rimurimu takeke, meadows once covered all the bays in Te Rawhiti, Those
who remember these say, “All the bays were black with sea grass”. Another said that
she didn’t like swimming at low tide because of the grass meadows and the things that
moved in them”. Another said that when the king tides came (when the tides came
higher and lower than usual) they used to go into the previously covered grass areas
of the bays and gather scallops, cats eyes, puupuu and other shell fish. Takeke, baby
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Snapper, and many small fish use the grass as a nursery.
In 1980, that most of the sea floor of Urupukapuka bay was covered with a thick mat of
sea grass and in 1991, the bay was still covered with sea grass. These meadows have
declined, as they have across the whole of New Zealand’s estuaries . Urupukapuka bay
has a patch of sea grass now, which was a reason for the investigation in this bay.
Where the road has been sealed at Rawhiti itself, the grass is slowly re-establishing
itself.
We heard that NIWA had been contracted to rebuild the sea grass meadows in the
Whangarei harbour as the hapu and the NRC saw that their fishery depended on it. We
rang Dr Fleur Matheson in NIWA and met to talk about sea grass re-planting in our area.
This team then applied successfully for funding from the Northern Regional Council to
begin the project for the “[a]ssessment of the extent and cause of seagrass decline at
Urupukapuka Bay, Bay of Islands Phase 1.
They have established that there is a decline in the eastern Bay of Islands. They have
planted and are monitoring some 12 sets of sea grass plants around Urupukapuka
island, Poroporo, Te Whau and Kaingahoa and Hauai bays. This study is continuing.
And we are going to be part of the monitoring team, this time!
SCALLOPS
James Williams of NIWA has set moorings of scallops in three places iour rohe. They
have been monitoring them checking on the growth of the spats in the bracken fern
mesh. The growing of the spats can be done by us when the process is established.
Re-growing scallops in our rohe is part of a scallop enhancement plan for the north.
The NIWA report is due soon. We will keep you up to date.
HUI again: