Taupo Times

27-home marae project opens

Developmen­t hopes to bring iwi back to ancestoral land

- MATTHEW MARTIN

A housing project at Waimahana Marae near Taupō will breathe new life into the central North Island iwi of Ngāti Tahu-Ngāti Whaoa, with an injection of almost $12.5 million to build 27 homes on ancestral land.

Māori Developmen­t Minister Willie Jackson said the project would bring whānau back to their tūrangawae­wae, ensure intergener­ational living thrives and reinvigora­te Waimahana Marae.

Jackson was joined by Labour Party colleague Tamati Coffey and Ngāti Tahu-Ngāti Whaoa iwi members at the opening of the papakāinga developmen­t project on Saturday, when they also unveiled a plaque dedicated to tamariki who died during the influenza pandemic in 1918.

The ceremony marked the start of constructi­on for the first part of the papakāinga project, that will have 27 rental homes built between Reporoa and Taupō.

The Government has invested $12.35m in the project through its Whai Kāinga Whai Oranga joint funding initiative between Te Puni Kōkiri and the Ministry for Housing and Urban Developmen­t, which aims to increase Māori housing supply country-wide.

Waimahana Marae chairman Erureti Rakena said the marae was reopened in 2019 after lying almost abandoned for 40 years and welcomed the funding announceme­nt of $3.7m to build seven collective­ly owned rental homes on its land.

The project has been split into three parts and will be managed by Tauhara North Kāinga. The second and third projects will have a further 20 rental homes built for kaumātua across the four Ngāti Tahu-Ngāti Whaoa marae in the rohe.

‘‘The marae has been sitting silent for 40 years but it was always a dream of out tūpuna [ancestors] to bring the whānau back to the marae,’’ Rakena said.

‘‘In the early 1900s there was a papakāinga there but due to the deaths of those babies in the [influenza] pandemic our people felt the marae had been cursed.’’

Rakena said the Waimahana whānau had put in a lot of work during the past five years to get to this point and were also grateful to the Newton whānau and the Tauhara North Trust who have been supporters of the project.

Renowned carver Jim Schuster helped with the restoratio­n of the marae’s carvings and people from a Rotorua-based rehabilita­tion clinic had helped to clean the marae and do some heavy lifting when required.

‘‘It was always the focus when we reformed the trust to get our tūpuna restored and move from there.

‘‘We are obviously very happy, and now the first thing is to bring the kaumātua back and the children will follow.’’

Jackson said at Waitangi last year, the Government made a commitment to increase support for Māori housing across the country.

‘‘As we draw near to Waitangi Day, it’s fitting to celebrate this much needed papakāinga developmen­t.

‘‘I congratula­te the whānau for reaching this important milestone in their housing journey.

‘‘I know the vision behind this papakāinga is to ensure intergener­ational living thrives, where whānau are living in warm, safe and affordable homes.’’

Jackson said Covid-19 was a sad reminder for many Māori communitie­s of the devastatio­n caused by the influenza pandemic and about the importance of protecting whānau and whakapapa.

‘‘We can learn from our past, draw strength from it and look forward to a brighter future,’’ he said.

‘‘The next generation of tamariki will live in warm, safe and healthy homes thanks to the vision and hard work of their whānau.’’

 ?? ?? Labour Party MPs Willy Jackson, left, and Tamati Coffey at the Waimahana Marae papakāinga project launch. Left: The Waimahana Marae papakāinga launch ceremony was held on Saturday.
Labour Party MPs Willy Jackson, left, and Tamati Coffey at the Waimahana Marae papakāinga project launch. Left: The Waimahana Marae papakāinga launch ceremony was held on Saturday.
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