Bishop Sir Paul Reeves has died
The Right Reverend and The Honourable Sir Paul Reeves
Media Release 14 August 2012
Bishop Sir Paul Reeves has died in Auckland this morning. He was aged 78.
The Reeves whanau wish to acknowledge the immense support they have received since Sir Paul announced he was stepping back from most aspects of his public life after the recent diagnosis of cancer.
The immediate whanau will spend some private time with Sir Paul before the public tangi begins tomorrow at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Auckland. The whanau acknowledge and are very aware of the immense grief and loss felt by Maori, the Church and the wider community, and there will be time and opportunity for people to pay their respects in the days to come.
Born in Wellington, Sir Paul’s whakapapa is Te Atiawa. He began his ministry as a deacon in Tokoroa and later spent five years England. In 1964 as Vicar of Okato, a Taranaki coastal town, Sir Paul lived amongst his whanaunga. He was appointed Bishop of Waiapu in 1971. In 1979 he became Bishop of Auckland, and then Primate and Archbishop of New Zealand the following year. In 1985 Sir Paul was appointed Governor-General, the first Maori to hold that position.
Speaking on behalf of the Anglican Church of Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia, Archbishop David Moxon says, “Bishop Paul took the office of being a bishop and an archbishop into the role of Governor General. He aimed to bring people together, to listen to people at the edges and to speak to issues. In his role he was always present amongst the people. He continued to follow the gospel and remained a bishop contributing a great deal to our church and community. Bishop Paul was and remains a taonga to us and future generations.”
Sir Paul
was the Anglican Observer at the United Nations from 1991 -
1993. He observed elections in Ghana and South Africa on
behalf of the Commonwealth and assisted with the
constitutional reform process in Guyana. He chaired a review
of the Fijian Constitution. Sir Paul acted as the
Commonwealth Special Observer to Guyana and Fiji, and
appointed in 2005, was the incumbent Chancellor of Auckland
University of Technology.