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Thursday, 11 March 2010
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1st October 2006

Tenakoutou Earthsong people 

My name is Bruce Stewart of Tapu Te Ranga Marae our site is www.taputeranga.maori.nz.  We have been going since 1974.

In a lot of ways it has been cart before the horse…mainly because ‘they’ were not ready…I couldn’t wait.

So we now have 50 acres of Wellington and about to start our nohokainga (village) incorporating renewable energy. Intended whanau will be mainly Maori or anyone who’d like to live in a Maori way…includes the non ownership of Te Whenua.

The aim is ‘not a place to live as a way to live’ it is my view the biggest task is to revisit and renew the processes in learning to live again together. Enjoyed visiting your site…loved having a glimpse into your processes...valuable stuff.

Love to keep in touch.

Na Bruce Stewart.

 
28th September 2006

It’s been a big day for me…it has been two years since I’ve had a bath…‘due to my legs being heavily wrapped up…I was told at the beginning ‘they may never heal’ but my Community Nurse Ruth never gave up…she always believed they could heal.

At our local pool I was able to walk without my sticks…I could fall over and get up again…by myself.

Nurse Ruth, I’m not sure if you understand what that means to me.

 

 
16th September 2006

Whanau in front of Tane Whaiora  - 70th BirthdayTenakoe, my dear friend Sir Michael Fowler… it was real good to receive your letter together with the koha of water colors, done by your hand…we will hang them together with your photo in our whare.

It is now a month since I received your letter…I replied to it straight away but didn’t send it as a few words seemed inadequate to pass on my/our respect to you…for over a decade of major support. It led to Sir Robert Muldoon’s visit and in turn second chance education…still in place today.

 

Our first Whare, Tane Whaiora is named after you…remember it was opened on the same day as The Michael Fowler Centre…what a day for Wellington!

The Editorial of The Evening Post called it; “Wellingtons Day of the decade.” It may be the only Maori Whare named after a pakeha.

'Whaiora’ is a transliteration of Fowler…it also means ‘pursuit of our full potential’…under tikanga I was not quite correct in making a whare after a pakeha and also when the person is still alive…sometimes it is not good not knowing all the rules. Now I know the rules…the name still stands.

Two weeks ago my whangai daughter, Lyn-Anne lay in Tane Whaiora…I together with our family gathered…we slept with her, giving her a good send off.

Arohanui kia koe, me to whanau…Bruce

 
12th September 2006

At present we are having five or six hui a week…this past winter has seen me often sitting by the dinning room fire watching the different Manuhere…especially the Tamariki having fun.

“Koro, would you like a tea?’

“Ae, I’d love one Moko.’”

“Milk and sugar?”

“A little milk please.”

I love being spoilt…I am never lonely.

The insurance policy called ‘respect’ is kicking in.

 
31st August 2006

Yesterday we buried Lynn-Anne…one of our own. Not by toto…one does not have to be toto to be Family…she was always there for us all…never in a loud way. 

Was I embarrassed when her box couldn’t fit through the door of any of our whare…or what!!

We decided to put her in The Mahau of Tane Whaiora…sort of half in the open…I asked if my chair-bed be bought up…there we were under the stars with her tane Kingi and their babies…singing and telling stories…I was sort-of-dozing when I heard one of my older moko telling how she went to The Queens tangi and took her son…”coz they’d be looking for a new King.”

It’s quite a feat getting up the steps to The Mahau and it seems I’m not the only one with four legs…plus it’s not about getting up…it’s getting back down…still they came paying their respects and half-carried-half-falling their way back down…driven by love they came.

When I saw the wheel-chair with my whanaunga Queenie…paralyzed with a stroke… eyeing up the steps, I said, “Queenie you’re never make it, stay there!” But I caught a glint of to-the-Tangi-or bust in her eyes…she found a couple of strong Mokos and was three quarter carried, one quarter walked her dead legs up the steps…to pay her respects to our girl.

 
18th August 2006

I would have loved to have gone up to Ngaruwahia to the Tangi of Te Arikinui, Atairangikahu…in my condition I would be a burden to my whanau.

When I was nineteen, at the coronation…I was at the back with our whanau hosting the endless crowds…it was all day in the sink doing dishes…I remember the sinks were made up from a folded sheet of galvanized iron, clever.

For quite some time a young woman was sharing my sink…when she was called away one of my aunties said, “Do you know who was your dishes-mate?”

“No.”

“Princess Piki.”

 
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