Sir Apirana Ngata – politician, leader and champion of Maori
Broadcaster Willie Jackson once hailed Sir Apirana Ngata as ‘Maoridom’s greatest politician and social engineer’. Matt Stewart reflects on the life of this great Kiwi leader.
Sir Apirana Ngata is widely held to be Maoridom’s greatest statesman. Sixtyseven years ago last week, the boy from the East Cape died, aged 76. His tangi drew wellwishers from throughout the country.
In July 1950, his funeral near Ruatoria featured on the Weekly
Review newsreel, which pronounced that ‘‘both in and out of Parliament, Sir Apirana Ngata devoted his life to the advancement of his people and his body will go to rest in their midst in sight of the land he loved so well’’.
One of 15 children, the Ngati Porou descendant is still revered as our foremost Maori politician. First elected in 1905 for the Eastern Maori electorate, he held the position until 1943.
Ngata graduated university with a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in politics, in 1893 – the first Maori to complete a tertiary degree in New Zealand. Three years later, he completed a law degree and notched up another honour – becoming the first New Zealander to gain a double degree.
Once in Parliament, he wielded intelligence, tact and political savvy. Ngata was renowned for his oratorial prowess, speaking out against the Government’s policies towards Maori, particularly those encouraging the sale of Maori land.
Not just a politician, lawyer or scholar, he was also known as an activist, agitating for the protection of the Maori language and customs – actively promoting haka, poi, traditional carving and the building of wharenui nationwide, as well as writing widely on Maori culture’s place in the modern age.
Former politician and broadcaster Willie Jackson hailed Ngata, back in 2010, as Maoridom’s greatest politician and social engineer.
A member of the Liberal Party – the forerunner to today’s National Party – Ngata made brave and controversial decisions as an MP, Jackson said. For him, three decisions stood out: Ngata’s support of the Tohunga Suppression Act 1907; his direction to Maori to go to war; and his ban on alcohol sales to his Ngati Porou people of the East Coast.
When Ngata supported the controversial Tohunga Suppression Act, aimed at replacing traditional Maori healers with modern medicine, he risked selling out his own culture.
‘‘But he was more concerned about mortal risks posed by charlatans dispensing lethal concoctions than any diminishment of Maori traditions and knowledge,’’ Jackson said.
The Maori Battalion was Ngata’s brainchild – he believed Maori should volunteer for the Great War to show they were equals. Such a sacrifice would be rewarded once the fighting was over, he claimed.
‘‘We will lose some of our most promising young leaders. We have lost a few already. But we will gain the respect of our Pakeha brothers and the future of our race as a component and respected part of the New Zealand people will be less precarious.’’
Jackson wrote: ‘‘When he encouraged Maori to fight in two world wars, thousands of Maori lives were sacrificed. The heavy loss, Ngata reasoned, was the price of citizenship.’’
But the politician really took a risk when he banned the sale of liquor to his people on the East Coast in the 1920s. This was to ensure their mortgages would be paid, instead of that money being wasted money on alcohol. ‘‘He was condemned by many men, who accused him of treachery.’’
Despite that, Ngata is regarded ‘‘as the East Coast and Ngati Porou’s greatest son – and is described by many as the greatest Maori ever’’, Jackson said.
Reflecting on relations between Maori and Pakeha in The
Taranaki Daily News in 2015, Archbishop Brown Turei said for the first 100 years of the Treaty of Waitangi, Pakeha did much to ignore their obligations.
‘‘It was a century of war, bloodshed, the mass confiscation of Maori land, and marginalisation of the Maori race,’’ Turei wrote.
In 1940, during the 100th anniversary of the Treaty’s signing, leaders and chiefs gathered at Waitangi. Ngata stood and said: ‘‘I do not know of any year the Maori people have approached with so much misgiving as this centennial year ... in retrospect, what does the Maori see?
‘‘Lands gone, the power of chiefs humbled in the dust, Maori culture scattered and broken. What remained of all the fine things said 100 years ago?
‘‘Before proceeding further with the new century, it is the clear duty of the Government to try to wipe out the mistakes of the past 100 years.’’
Bernie Harris, a founding member of the Federation of Maori Authorities, remembers Ngata with reverence.
Harris’ mother, Witarina Harris, was Ngata’s secretary (and a champion of Maori in her own right) in the early 1930s, a time when Ngata was effective in using European tools for commerce and law to give leadership to Maori progress.
‘‘There is only one word in my lexicon that would adequately describe Sir Apirana Ngata – inspirational,’’ Harris said.
‘‘He has been the model, always in the background, that has shaped my life in everything that I have contributed and shared in Maori economic development in New Zealand.
‘‘I live my life with the three baskets of true values held by Maori – honour, integrity and humility. Just the mention of his name, and the memories come flooding in from the past.
‘‘I have other models to follow but none in my view compares with him – from the past, now and into the future.’’