NZ Land Wars Commemoration in Taranaki - 28-30 October 2019
New Zealand Land Wars Commemoration in Taranaki - 28-30 October 2019
With five weeks to go, preparations are
in full swing to host a national initiative, Te Pūtake o te
Riri, He Rā Maumahara, to commemorate the New Zealand land
wars in Taranaki.
Te Pūtake o te Riri, He Rā
Maumahara is a series of events being held across Aotearoa
New Zealand which seek to increase awareness among all
Aotearoa New Zealand citizens through the telling and
sharing of stories about our local history, significant
landmarks and people relating to the period of the New
Zealand wars, with the aim of strengthening relationships
and partnerships across the country. This year the events
are taking place in Taranaki from 28-30 October
2019.
Dr Ruakere Hond who is a key member of the
working party coordinating the event in Taranaki says that
Te Pūtake o te Riri gives the community the opportunity to
participate in an event that focuses on our nation’s local
history - a history that not many New Zealanders know
about.
“It’s an honour and a privilege to be a
part of this nationwide kaupapa and connecting with the
national narrative to tell the story of our region’s
history within the wars, a history which often goes
unrecognised. So we’re glad to be hosting Te Pūtake o te
Riri in Taranaki this year.
“The war in Taranaki
started on 17 March in 1860 and lasted for about 21 years.
There were battles and conflicts taking place across the
entire region during that time - at Te Kōhia near Waitara,
Puketakauere, Mahoetahi, Waireka, and also Turuturu-mōkai,
Te Ngutu o te Manu and Tauranga-ika in south Taranaki just
to name a few.
“Because of the length of time over
the 21 years leading to the ‘Pāhua’ - the sacking of
Parihaka in November 1881 by Crown troops - it has been
difficult to acknowledge the many battle sites across
Taranaki over that period.
“For these first
commemorations in Taranaki it has been decided to
concentrate on the battle sites around Waitara, particularly
Te Kōhia pā where the first shots of the land wars were
fired.
“While these first battles were primarily in
Te Atiawa whenua other Taranaki tribes came in support at
the time. With Te Pūtake o te Riri this year and for future
Te Pūtake o te Riri events, such as commemorations that may
take place in South Taranaki, we’ll see all iwi in
Taranaki come together again in support for the
kaupapa.
“Although there were violent battles, there
was also the passive resistance of Parihaka from 1878, which
was in opposition to the government’s enforcement of the
confiscation of approximately 1.275 million acres of
Taranaki land from Māori.
“The people of Parihaka
hadn’t become involved in the fighting, but they still had
land confiscated. Out of all of the land confiscated from
iwi across Taranaki only a small fraction of that
confiscated land was ever returned.
“Not a lot of
people in our communities know about these stories and this
history, so through Te Pūtake o te Riri we can begin to
change that.
“We would like to see as many people
from across the Taranaki community as well as the rest of
the country participate in Te Pūtake o te Riri. There was a
big turnout in the far north when it was hosted there last
year, we hope to see the same numbers if not more turn out
for the event here in Taranaki,” he says.
The
discussions which led to the creation of Te Pūtake o te
Riri, He Rā Maumahara first came about when students from
Otorohanga College presented to parliament a petition to set
aside a national day to remember the 19th century land wars.
Dr Hond recalls the conversations he had with many people
about what a day of remembrance would look
like.
“After the petition was sent to parliament a
number of different groups from around the country started
talking about what this day would like. Hoani Eriwata who
hosts our local annual commemoration of the land wars, Riri
me te Raukura, spoke with me about this day recognising our
local history here in Taranaki - the story of peaceful and
violent resistance.
“We then wrote a paper to
present to the Crown sharing a Taranaki perspective of
commemorating peaceful and violent resistance and that this
should be a part of a national kaupapa of remembering the
land wars,” he says.
A series of national hui were
then hosted by the Ministry of Māori Development where
communities could share their thoughts about what a national
day of remembrance should include and be about, with the
kaupapa eventually becoming Te Pūtake o te Riri, He Rā
Maumahara. Dr Hond says the nation needed to know why the
wars took place and that this part of the story was largely
missing from our shared national narrative.
“During
the discussions which led to the creation of Te Pūtake o te
Riri there was the feeling that the context of
rangatiratanga or sovereignty was lost in the retelling of
the land wars, and that there was a lot of focus on what
happened and where it happened but not a lot on why those
battles occurred and the themes underpinning the conflict.
Through Te Pūtake o te Riri we wanted to emphasise that
aspect and increase the community’s understanding of the
land wars and why they happened.”
The timing of Te
Pūtake o te Riri, He Rā Maumahara this year has been set
to recognise the signing of He Whakaputanga o te
Rangatiratanga o Niu Tireni (known in English as the
Declaration of Independence of the United Tribes of New
Zealand) on 28 October 1835.
“We wanted to bring to
the fore the ‘why’ behind the conflicts and focus on the
resistance for sovereignty that was taking place at the
time, which is why the date of the signing of He
Whakaputanga Rangatira, a document signed before the Treaty
of Waitangi asserting full Māori sovereignty, is being
recognised,” says Dr Hond.
“Te Pūtake o te Riri
is really about raising our critical awareness, and for all
of us to start talking constructively with each other about
our shared history. This kaupapa is one opportunity of many
for us to connect through our collective history and begin
having those meaningful, open and honest conversations with
one another so that we can move forward
together.”
Te Pūtake o te Riri, He Rā Maumahara is
being held in Taranaki from Monday 28 October to Wednesday
30 October. The events will begin at Owae Marae, where a
pōwhiri, a formal welcome, will be held for visitors from
across the country.
The programme for Te Pūtake o te
Riri, He Rā Maumahara includes a series of wānanga or
lessons about the land wars in Taranaki as well as visits to
sites significant to the time of the land wars such as Te
Kōhia Pā and Pukerangiora pā.
A Te Pūtake o te
Riri, He Rā Maumahara education programme has been created
for Taranaki primary and secondary schools which will run
alongside the main event programme. An invitation has been
extended to all Taranaki primary and secondary schools
encouraging teachers and students to participate in the
education programme.
Te Pūtake o te Riri, He Rā
Maumahara is a free event and is open to the public.
For more information about Te Pūtake o te Riri, He
Rā Maumahara taking place in Taranaki visit facebook.com/TePutakeOTeRiri.
For
more information about Te Pūtake o te Riri He Rā Maumahara
initiative visit https://www.tpk.govt.nz/en/whakamahia/te-putake-o-te-riri-wars-and-conflicts-in-new-zeal
ENDS