Thursday, July 21, 2016

ŌTUATAUA
The Ihumatao Stonefields in Manukau 


“One day these fields and land will come back to us as kaitiaki,” the impassioned words of Mavis Roberts, kuia of Te Ahiwaru tribe sat in her lounge looking out across the waahi that was once a sacred site for her people of Ihumatao, now being swallowed up irrev0ocably by Auckland’s International Airport expansion.

Some weeks earlier, I sat amongst the Otuataua rocks with a sketch book in hand and felt the nearness of her ancestors looking over my shoulder nodding their heads approvingly now, her words echoing their anguished cries when they were stripped off these cherished acres going right back to 1863 for alleged disloyalty to Queen Victoria.  A long time to grieve. 

As I sat amongst those rocks, there was an omnipresence of Te Ahiwaru generations around their fires, fishing nets and gardens.  I also felt their presence when the local tribes gave evidence to The Waitangi Tribunal Manukau Harbour Claim 1986:

The Natives were treated as rebels and war declared against them before they had engaged in rebellion of any kind and in the circumstances they had no alternative but to fight in self defence.  In their eyes, the fight was not against the Queen’s sovereignty, but a struggle for house and home ...”
(The Hon Sir William Sim, Royal Commission Report, 1926)
For Mavis, her son Saul, and nephew Jim, “This is more than a commercial thing without a heart,  a cash till nor is it a space for boxes to be built upon boxes.”  I asked, “What does this land mean?”  “He pūmanawa! A heartbeat!” 

“The old name for those stones is Atuataua – The Warriors of the Gods,” Saul Roberts told me.

Aucklanders turned their backs on this space in the 1960s when the sewage ponds were sited here,  “Though in a funny way that has protected the area from going the same way as other parts of Auckland.” 

The stone walls is evidence of a thriving industry built around survival; every stone moved with bare hands their warmth trapped in mounds provided the hothouses to propagate seeds and seedlings for planting in the fertile soils.

I saw images of harvesting the bounties of Tangaroa protected by the kaitiaki of The Manukau Harbour, [1] Kaiwhare’ the watchful taniwha. Their mana and prosperity was intact up to the 1860s when things went awfully wrong. This sublime rural landscape is as old as human habitation as early as the ninth Century.  The Otuataua Stonefields is testimony to the resourcefulness of early Maori to use stone walls to trap the heat in the walls of their houses and stone mounds. 

In their storage pits the stones provided a way to preserve food stocks such as kumara, taro and in later years, potatoes.

What happened? 

What happened is well documented in the testimonies put before The Waitangi Tribunal:

“... it was therefore resolved to drive these poor men and women and their children from their homes and confiscate their lands. There was no difficulty in finding a pretext.  They were Maoris and relatives of Potatau...”.
(The Hon Sir William Sim, Royal Commission Report , 1926)

Tainui tribes had valid customary rights promised under the treaty when it was signed in 1840.  Those rights were protected and guaranteed by the British Crown. In closing its hearing on The Manukau Harbour, The Waitangi Tribunal wrote;

 “… its governors and officials acted with ruthless pragmatism that sidelined the treaty and deliberately advantaged settlers over Maori, and its purchases left Te Ahiwaru, Te Aki Tai, Kawerau-a-Maki and Ngati Te Ata in poverty.”

1894, The Validation of Invalid Land Sales Act meant that any Pakeha settler mis-dealings concerning Maori land were legitimised by this Act. Te Ahiwaru, Te Akitai and Ngati Te Ata in Auckland and other tribes lost land through this vicious Act.


Evidence of Pakeha settlement here in the 1800s also abound; reminders in the names Ellett, Rennie, Wallace, Mendelsshon and Montgomerie families.

The Ōtuataua Stone Fields were secured as a reserve in 1989 by The Manukau City Council, in Sir Barry Curtis’ words;

“To honour the history of the land and the people who built their homes and raised the families here over the past 800 years.”
Well, the signs are that’s come to an end …

The second runway for Auckland International Airport has already gobbled up whanau and land.  Tracts of rich horticultural soils around Mavis and her whanau are going.  And there’s no easing back in sight.

Saul Roberts told me, “Big wet boxes go up everywhere and nowhere.  Once land becomes urban then there’s no going back.  It’s called progress, but at what cost?”

“Every time I open my back door, I see the shadow of an airport,” Mavis concluded. “No, it’s never too late; the heartbeat of our ancestors breathes in us.”

And so, despite a Royal Commission Report, and a hearing before The Waitangi Tribunal, the litany of broken promises for Mavis and her people continue. 

Rua Cooper, Tainui kaumatua left us this taonga:
 “Ahakoa nga hara kua ūtaina ki runga ki te moana tapu e hora nei, ngā he me ngā whakamomori kei tua, ahakoa te kaika te ngākau o a mātau rangatahi, ka ū tonu te ngākau māhaki o te iwi o Manukau ki te ture Atua, ki te ture whenua, me te ture o te motu.  Engari, me whakatika ngā hara ahakoa atu mehe tīmata ano”
Rua Cooper 1992
(Translation)
Despite wrong doings to the people and to the Manukau Harbour, and some chafing at the bit by our young people, those before us reaffirmed their loyalty to the nation; it’s not our loyalty that is in question but the good faith of the other partner of the treaty.  Past wrongs can be put right, and it’s not too late to begin again.”

Manukau has a special cultural heritage.  The Ōtuataua Stonefields can only survive where it is.  



[1] Te Manuka – the name, meaning “anxiety” over the dangerous harbour crossing was named by Hoturoa, captain of Tainui canoe