Family say final goodbyes to Jim Anderton at Waiheke burial
Darwin: Family and friends are said their final goodbyes to Jim Anderton yesterday afternoon. The former deputy Prime Minister is being buried at Onetangi Cemetery, on Waiheke Island. Anderton died last weekend, two weeks shy of his 80th birthday. As Anderton’s casket was unloaded from the hearse and carried to his burial plot a haka performed by mourners rang out. A priest led the procession. A speech made in both English and Maori remembered him as a loved husband, father, grandfather and a man of principle. The burial closed with a song and a prayer.
Former Labour list MP Dover Samuels was among the mourners. He shared stories about his time fishing with Anderton and their friendship.
About 100 people gathered at the cemetery.
It is where his mother is buried and where he spent many years as a child, family friend Josie Pagani said.
“There’s a big family connection here.
“He was very much an Aucklander and an adopted Cantabrian.” Pagani, who worked in Anderton’s office while he was a Labour poltician, said it was fitting to have a public funeral in Christchurch and a smaller gathering of friends, family and political associates in Auckland.
“It’s a time for family and those who really loved Jim as a husband, a friend and a mentor,” she said.
Hundreds attended his funeral in Christchurch on Thursday afternoon, held at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Addington, Christchurch.
Among those who came to pay their respects at the funeral were Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Finance Minister Grant Robertson, Wigram MP and Cabinet Minister Megan Woods (Anderton’s successor in Wigram), Christchurch Mayor and former Labour MP Lianne Dalziel, Auckland Mayor and former Labour leader Phil Goff, former Labour leader David Cunliffe, and Christchurch-based MPs including Labour’s Ruth Dyson, Poto Williams and National’s Gerry Brownlee and David Carter. The funeral was open for the public to attend and streamed live on YouTube.