Weekend Herald

Honouring the memory of our bloodiest conflict

Martin Johnston looks at the first commemorat­ion of the NZ Wars and how the day has come to be officially remembered

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College students’ shock at the burning to death of residents of a Waikato village is at the heart of the annual day to remember the New Zealand Wars.

Today i s the first Raa Maumahara National Day of Commemorat­ion for the wars, which will be marked every year on October 28.

The wars were fought from 1843 to 1872 between many Maori groups on one side, and on the other, British and New Zealand forces supported by other Maori allies.

A 12,000- strong petition to Parliament organised by Otorohanga College students and staff calling for a national commemorat­ion day sparked widespread support and built on the efforts of iwi and community groups since 2010.

Students Leah Bell and Waimarama Anderson began the petition in 2014 after attending the 150- year commemorat­ion events of the invasion of Rangiaowhi­a and the Battle of Orakau.

They were moved by hearing from descendant­s of people from the largely undefended village of Rangiaowhi­a, near Te Awamutu, which was attacked by British forces on February 21, 1864. Buildings were burned with people inside them.

Historian Vincent O’Malley, author of The Great War for New Zealand, Waikato 1800- 2000, said Rangiaowhi­a was a refuge for women, children and the elderly.

“I argue in my book that the evidence that people were deliberate­ly torched to death is clear and unambiguou­s.”

Bell, now a university student, said the British forces broke the rules of engagement. It was “a horrendous story to hear and the grief was still very real with the people. We felt that, and witnessed it in a concentrat­ed environmen­t when hearing the stories from the descendant­s of the people of Rangiaowhi­a.”

The wars were fought in Marlboroug­h, Wellington, Northland, Taranaki, Waikato, Tauranga, Whanganui, and on the North Island’s east coast and central plateau. It has been estimated that more than 3000 people died, but O’Malley believes the toll, although hard to calculate accurately, was probably higher. His study of the Waikato War found the casualty rate per head of population was probably higher than New Zealand suffered in World War I, considered the country’s “greatest bloodbath”.

O’Malley said the wars re- shaped the

I think it’s a big step in the maturing of our nation. It’s a recognitio­n that we need to acknowledg­e that these pretty difficult episodes. Vincent O’Malley, historian

country. After the mid- 1860s the Treaty of Waitangi was “thrown out the window” for at least a century, there were huge changes in demographi­cs and the ethnic power balance, and generation­s of Maori were condemned to landlessne­ss and poverty.

Of the commemorat­ion day, he said: “I think it’s a big step in the maturing of our nation. It’s a recognitio­n that we need to acknowledg­e that these pretty difficult episodes from the past are a part of our nation’s story.”

The last Government set aside $ 4 million over four years to support regional New Zealand Wars commemorat­ion events throughout the year and national events every October 28, including today’s E Rima Challenge multisport event in Northland.

Otorohanga College English teacher and petition organiser Mariana Papa said the new Government would be lobbied to make the day a public holiday.

 ??  ?? Organisers of the petition seeking the commemorat­ion day, from left, Rahui Papa, Tai Jones, Waimarama Anderson, Leah Bell, Rhiannon Magee, Mariana Papa.
Organisers of the petition seeking the commemorat­ion day, from left, Rahui Papa, Tai Jones, Waimarama Anderson, Leah Bell, Rhiannon Magee, Mariana Papa.
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