Bay of Plenty Times

Rua K¯enana taonga returns home ahead of symposium at Tuapou Marae

- Charlotte Jones

Tears flowed as a taonga with whakapapa to Tuhoe prophet Rua Ke¯nana was returned home last week ahead of a symposium this weekend to reflect on his life and legacy.

The taonga, a kahu huruhuru (feathered cloak), belonged to Rua Ke¯nana’s daughter, Pinepine, and was stolen by armed police when they raided the village of Maungapoha­tu in the Urewera Ranges to arrest Rua Kenana on false charges 105 years ago.

Police also killed two Maori men at the settlement, including Rua Ke¯nana’s son Toko.

The symposium will be held at

Tuapou Marae on the anniversar­y of the invasion. It also marks one year since the passing of the Rua Ke¯nana Pardon Bill in which the Crown apologised for the atrocities committed and provided a statutory pardon restoring Rua Ke¯nana’s character, mana, and reputation.

The kahu huruhuru is on loan from Te Papa Tongarewa and will be displayed alongside other taonga with whakapapa to Rua Ke¯nana at the marae.

For Pinepine’s greatgrand­daughter Toni Boynton it was emotional to see her greatgrand­mother’s kahu huruhuru return home with a po¯whiri at Te Whare Taonga o Taketake — the Whakatane Museum and Research Centre.

“It’s incredibly emotional to see this and have a physical connection to her,” she said.

“It’s almost like my kuia has come back. It has me thinking about what happened to her and the atrocities committed against her and other women and how, despite it all, she held a lot of mana. She never lost that.”

Boynton said the pardon of Rua Ke¯nana and the symposium reflected mana being returned to him and his mangainga (descendant­s).

As a child, whenever Boynton was ill, her wha¯nau would ask Rua Ke¯nana to watch over her.

“We always just knew him as koro,” she said.

“We always had a connection to him, and we were always speaking about him. It wasn’t until I was older that I learnt the true significan­ce of his story.”

As a child, she was told not to mention her relationsh­ip to Rua Ke¯nana as it could lead to ridicule. However, the pardon was a turning point.

Te Whare Taketake has provided several taonga from its collection to the symposium to be displayed alongside the kahu huruhuru.

Collection­s and research manager Mark Sykes said the symposium was the “beginning of something more” and by connecting the kahu huruhuru through whakapapa with wha¯nau, hapu and iwi the taonga finally gets a voice.

He said he would like to see it come home permanentl­y.

Te Papa kaitiaki taonga Maori Lisa Osborne accompanie­d the kahu huruhuru home alongside several other Te Papa staff members and said she too would like to see it come home for good.

“It was a real honour and a privilege to bring this taonga home to the iwi,” Osborne said.

“Moments like this are absolutely wonderful to experience and it’s the reason why I love my job. It’s wonderful to bring it home and to support the hapu and iwi in this kaupapa.”

The kahu huruhuru is owned by the Department of Foreign Affairs, Osborne said, and there were some logistics that needed to be worked through before permanentl­y.

Te Whare Wananga o Awanuiaran­gi Professor of Maori and Indigenous Developmen­t Taiarahia Black is leading the kaupapa around the symposium and has released four booklets of research about Rua Kenana collated by his PHD students.

He said it was his hope, and the aim of the symposium, to expand opportunit­ies for life-long learning and to advance research and scholarshi­p for Maori communitie­s.

“The aim of the symposium is to promote higher standards of research and scholarshi­p,” Black said.

“It is also to ensure an exceptiona­l and distinctiv­e learning experience for our Maori communitie­s within that reo rangahou (Maori language research).

“By developing the symposium, we want to strengthen our it could return connection­s with whanau, hapu and iwi and to encourage reo rangahou as our way forward for the future.”

Black said the symposium was built on partnershi­p and collaborat­ion between Te Whare Taketake, Te Papa, Tuapou Marae and Nga Toenga o Nga Tamariki a Iharaia Nga Uri o Maungapoha­tu charitable trust.

The symposium will allow the creation of new knowledge and to generate growth for undergradu­ate and post-graduate study in the te ao Maori research space, he said.

“Students can embark on journeys of knowledge acquisitio­n in te reo and embrace that knowledge relevant to their hapu, iwi and marae,” Black said.

The symposium is the first of three planned. The second will be hosted at Te Whare Wananga o Awanuiaran­gi, and the third at Maungapoha­tu.

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 ?? PHOTO / FILE ?? Maori prophet Rua Ke¯nana.
PHOTO / FILE Maori prophet Rua Ke¯nana.

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