Hone Harawira's Ae Marika!
Ae Marika!
A column published in the Northland Age
By
Hone Harawira
MP for Tai Tokerau
MANA Leader
11 October 2011
To comment on this column please go to my
website www.mana.net.nz Tomorrow we bury a good man, Hone "Man"
Pomare. Hone was only 40 years old, but the stories they
tell about him suggest a man of many more years than
that. Like a lot of us, Hone had been away in Aussie for
years. He came home a few years back and that's when I first
met him. He came home because he wanted to build a home
for his family and a future for his kids, and in the short
time I knew him he packed in a lot. He'd cleared a big
section on some whanau land just outside of Kaikohe, put
down some gardens, started building some small whare, gotten
involved with the Maori organic buzz, was into Maori
healing, been around the world half a dozen times on those
kaupapa and worked on a rez up in Canada ... and that was
just in the 3 years that I knew him! His wife Mere worked
for me for a while (full-time work on a part-time wage and a
wonderful person in her own right) and that's how I got to
meet him. Hone was a big man, easy to smile, and nice to
have around. He never seemed like a threat to anyone but
always had that way about him which suggested he knew how to
handle himself. He was a calming presence which some people
took as him being a bit too laid back, but when you're
operating at a hundred thousand miles an hour like I am,
that's just the kind of guy you need to help chill you
out.
Whenever I went to Kaikohe I'd pick him up to go
visiting folks who needed a hand with this, that and the
other. Hone seemed to know heaps of people, and I found out
later that even when he didn't know people, he had a way of
making them want to know him. He mixed freely with all the
hoodlums I knew, and heaps more that I didn't, and when I
introduced him to people from parliament he mixed with them
like he'd known them all his life as well too! Hone worked
alongside me all the time that I knew him, and for the past
few months I was able to pay him a little bit for what he
did. But he worked for me because he loved the kaupapa and
just wanted to be part of the buzz; to be part of a new
world and to share in the joy of helping bring about change
in people's lives. I think he saw that in me and wanted to
be part of that, but the truth is a little bit different.
The fact is that I saw special things in him, and I wanted
to be part of his buzz as well. Farewell my friend. Life
doesn't often send us special people like you. I'll miss you
heaps. Say hi to the folks in Hawaiki, and we'll see you
when we get there. Haere e te rangatira, haere. Hoki atu
ki to ükaipö, ki nga rua köiwi o nga matua tupuna.
Takahia i tera ara tapu kia tae atu ki te rerenga wairua.
Rukuhia i nga rimurimu, a, rere atu, rere atu, rere atu
ra. Hone had some lovely kids, and now they haven't got a
dad. I hope we can do for his whanau what he was able to
help me do for many, many others. Hone Pomare is lying in
state at Mokonuiarangi marae in Utakura. There will be a
service at the marae at 10am tomorrow, following which he
will be taken to Rahiri to be buried, and then back to the
marae for a
häkari.
Sometimes
life just sux ...
Ends