The Untold Story Of The Treaty Of Waitangi
PUBLICITY RELEASE
THURSDAY JANUARY 29 2009
The Untold Story Of The Treaty Of Waitangi - On Maori Television
Comedian Mike King might be most famous for being funny, but his latest series reveals there's a lot more to him than playing for laughs.
LOST IN TRANSLATION - to premiere on Maori Television on Sunday February 8 at 8.30 PM - sees King retrace the journey taken by the Treaty of Waitangi, back in 1840, to find the real story of what happened at the founding of our nation.
He finds the descendants of those who signed, those who didn't, and people whose forebears were the Treaty carriers - from missionaries to military men and traders.
Nine sheets of the document that founded our nation were taken around Aotearoa to gather up signatures, following the signings on that first Waitangi Day on February 6.
This 10-part show investigates those journeys, as follows:
EPISODE ONE - Sunday February 8
An
overview of the series, featuring King's personal journey,
and segments of stories shot around the country.
EPISODE TWO - Sunday February 15 - WAITANGI GROUNDS
AND BAY OF ISLANDS
Tonight: What were the events leading
up to the Treaty, and why did the British see a need for it
in the first place.
Also, Hone Harawira talks about his
tupuna Tamati Waka Nene, and growing up to find out he was
named after a man who was in favour of signing the
Treaty.
EPISODE THREE - Sunday February 22 - MANGUNGU
/ WAIMA VALLEY / HOREKE / KAITAIA / RUAPEKAPEKA PA
King's tupuna - Mohi Tawhai - was a well-known
Hokianga chief who signed the Treaty. The presenter makes a
personal stop at Waima Valley  where his tupuna came from.
The presenter makes a personal stop at Waima Valley to learn
more about the role his tupuna played in the Treaty story.
Also in this episode, the treaty process is thrown into
chaos when the man in charge, Captain William Hobson suffers
a stroke.
EPISODE FOUR - Sunday March 1 - AWHITU
PENINSULA , AUCKLAND AND KAWHIA
It's called the
Manukau-Kawhia Sheet, because it was signed in these places,
but there is a question mark over exactly where on the
Manukau Harbour these signings occurred. King tries to get
to the bottom of this mystery and explores the
possibilities. From the Mission Station at Orua Bay, King
takes a water taxi to the place Ngati Whatua believe their
ancestors signed. This episode looks closely at a prominent
Catholic bishop of the time - Pompallier - an
influential man some believe may have discouraged some
chiefs from signing.
King also goes to Kawhia to meet
local historian, Frank Thorne, a descendant of signatory, Te
Matenga.
EPISODE FIVE - Sunday March 8 - ROTORUA
/ TAUPO / OPOTIKI / WHAKATANE / TANEATUA
Why are two
large Bay of Plenty tribes missing from our nation's
founding document? This episode investigates the travels of
two separate sheets with quite different outcomes. One went
inland to Taupo and Rotorua, but what happened when it was
presented to Te Arawa and Ngati Tuwharetoa? The case of the
vanishing sheet. The other sheet goes off with a coastal
trader called James Fedarb, whose descendants are
interviewed. Later, King saddles up and heads into Tuhoe,
to find out from Tamati Kruger why they didn't sign.
EPISODE SIX - Sunday March 15 - TAURANGA / MATAKANA
ISLAND / COROMANDEL / AUCKLAND As well as tensions between
Maori and Pakeha, and between tribes, another rivalry was
going strong at the time of the Treaty signing - between
Protestant and Catholic missionaries.
King explores
this, and in the process finds himself on the trail of
another mystery, as he goes in search of another sheet that
never returned to Crown hands. This one was one of the
flashest of the lot - beautifully ornate, with wax seals
- and improbably, he does find it.
EPISODE SEVEN
- Sunday March 22 - GISBORNE / MANUTUKE / TOLAGA BAY /
RANGITUKIA
How did Christianity spread on the East Coast,
and what did it have to do with the Treaty? This is the
story of one missionary who carried the sheet in that area
- William Williams - and a freed slave called Piripi
Taumata-a-Kura. Many years before the Treaty arrived in
Gisborne a group of Ngati Porou had been taken as Ngapuhi
slaves. Williams returns with one, releases him, and in the
process creates a warmer reception for the Treaty.
EPISODE EIGHT - Sunday March 29 - PORT WAIKATO /
WELLINGTON / WAIKATO
Two sheets travelled together to
Port Waikato and on to the Manukau Harbour. One was the
only one of the nine sheets to be written in English - and
the official version of our founding document. In the end,
39 signatures were on the English, and 5 were the Maori
sheet. So why did Maori put their names to this one English
sheet where the terms spelled out in English are so
different to those written in Maori?
This show also
looks at story of the first Maori king, Te Wherowhero, and
why he didn't sign.
EPISODE NINE - Sunday April 5
- PAIHIA / WELLINGTON / PETONE / KAPITI ISLAND /
OTAKI
While William Williams worked on the East Coast,
his brother Henry, who had translated the Treaty at Waitangi
from English into Maori, was busy elsewhere.
King
interviews Henry's great-great granddaughter, Caroline
Fitzgerald. King also meets two descendants of two women
who signed, Kahe Te Rau-O-Te-Rangi and her cousin Rangi
Topeora.
Also in this show, the story of Te Rauparaha and his friendship with  missionary Octavius Hadfield, through the words and stories of that missionary's descendant - Paraparaumu man, Dave Hadfield.
EPISODE TEN -
Sunday April 12 - AKAROA / STEWART ISLAND / RUAPUKE ISLAND
/ OTAGO / MARLBOROUGH SOUNDS
The sheer distance
travelled is this episode is a feat in itself - a fair
indication of what the Treaty carrier of the day had to do.
British officer Major Thomas Bunbury was a trained military
man and a hero of the wars against Napoleon before he came
to New Zealand He sets off on his mission to sign up the
South Island , but returns with just 27 signatures.
For an issue that generates so much heated debate and creates so much tension, it is amazing how little most people know about this dramatic and important chapter in our shared history. LOST IN TRANSLATION premieres on Maori Television on Sunday February 8 at 8.30 PM.
Ends