
Taonga gifting (L – R) Tania MacGregor, Liz Karaitiana, Mayor Martin Connelly, Dani Dean, Maria Tanoa.
A Māori kākahu (cloak) gifted to South Wairarapa District Council last month represents a powerful symbolic gesture from the original mana whenua (people of the land) of Martinborough, said Mayor Martin Connelly.
“This taonga (gift) humbles the council and it is an honour that we would be thought worthy of it,” said Mayor Connelly at the kākahu gifting ceremony on 19 October at the Waihinga Centre in Martinborough.
The kākahu was a bequest to the council from the late Tiki-Rangimarie Mahupuku McGregor of Ngati Hikawera, prior to his passing on 22 June 2021. It was made with aroha by his whānau from Soulway Church in Masterton. The kākahu’s given name is Manaakitanga o Ngati Hikawera.
“The gifting of this kākahu, Manaakitanga o Ngati Hikawera, to the council of South Wairarapa was a moment of reflection, ka mua, ka muri – acknowledging the past to set direction for the future. At council, we are mindful that the key is manaakitanga and understanding our role in reciprocity,” said the council Pou Māori Advisor, Narida Hooper.
“Where we stand today is their whenua, the land they were displaced from over a century ago,” said Mayor Connelly. “The taonga of this kākahu, along with the loan of the name Waihinga, continues what Matua Rangi once referred to as the awakening of Ngati Hikawera.”
“This kākahu connects us to Ngati Hikawera and to the spiritual world through the whakapapa of the values, ancestral knowledge and practices that went into its creation. When anyone from this council wears this cloak, they will share in that knowledge. Thank you very much for what you have created. It is beautiful,” said Mayor Connelly. … Continue Reading
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