The Fiji Times

Fiji’s first woman deputy PM

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Dr Meraia Taufa Vakatale was a monumental woman leader who broke many glass ceilings with her numerous firsts.

As an educationa­list, diplomat and politician, she profoundly impacted the lives of tens of thousands in Fiji and the region, particular­ly young women in politics and anti-nuclear activists. Dr Vakatale was; m Fiji’s first woman deputy prime minister; m The first woman to be elected as a cabinet minister; m The first female to be appointed as a deputy high commission­er; and

m The first Fijian woman principal of a secondary school in Fiji.

Dr Vakatale was also a fervent antinuclea­r activist - in 1995 she took a costly stand against her party and the then Sitiveni Rabuka government on renewed French nuclear testing on Mururoa Atoll in French Polynesia.

Joining a protest march against French testing led to her losing her cabinet position in the Rabuka-led government, in which she served as a member of the Soqosoqo ni Vakavulewa ni Taukei (SVT) party.

She held the portfolio of Education, Science and Technology in two stints: from 1993 to 1995 and then, after being reinstated, from 1997 to 1999.

In 1997 she was appointed Deputy Prime Minister. In 2000 she resigned as President of the SVT party over the 2000 coup fallout.

Dr Vakatale was a woman ahead of her time. Dedicated to her principles, she "paid it forward" to Pasifika generation­s by her fight to keep the Pacific a nuclear-free zone.

Dr Taufa Vakatale's spirited and unwavering determinat­ion, her activism, idealism and her principles inspired thousands of women and youth to fearlessly pursue their dreams.

The name Taufa Vakatale became a pioneer student at Adi Cakobau School in 1948, aged 10 years.

She was also the first female student at the all-male Queen Victoria School.

She completed her 6th form year at Suva Grammar School, where she became the first Fijian female to pass the NZ University Entrance.

She entered the University of Auckland and in 1963 was the first Fijian woman to graduate with a Bachelor of Arts degree, privately funding her studies from her wages as a teacher in Fiji.

Taufa Vakatale went on to further studies in the UK from 1963 to 1971 and on returning to Fiji, she became the first Fijian woman president of the Fiji YWCA - which became the driving force of the anti-nuclear protest movement in the early 1970s, while she was president.

She also became the principal of her old school, the Adi Cakobau School.

In her time as an educationa­list, Dr Vakatale discipline­d fairly, understood her students, and entrusted them with positive goals for their future, instructin­g them to "leave the world better than we found it". She was respected and honoured. Her feats helped ease the students' own steps, to bring to life the Adi Cakobau School motto.

Of petite and elegant frame, in moral stature Dr Vakatale towered above many.

In diplomacy she served as Fiji's Deputy High Commission­er to the UK in 1980, whilst single-handedly raising her daughter to become a lawyer.

The University of St Andrews in Scotland awarded her an Honorary Doctorate of Letters for her contributi­on to the cause of Pacific women, while Fiji bestowed her with the Order of Fiji in 1996.

The extraordin­ary Dr Meraia Taufa Vakatale died on 24 June 2023 aged 84 and is survived by her only daughter Alanieta Vakatale, three granddaugh­ters, and many more following in her footsteps to leave this world a better place.

 ?? ?? Dr Meraia Taufa Vakatale (centre ) at an anti-nuclear protest march in 1995. Picture: DEVPOLICY.ORG
Dr Meraia Taufa Vakatale (centre ) at an anti-nuclear protest march in 1995. Picture: DEVPOLICY.ORG
 ?? ?? Dr Meraia Taufa Vakatale, devpolicy.org Picture: ABC.NET.AU
Dr Meraia Taufa Vakatale, devpolicy.org Picture: ABC.NET.AU
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