Maungapohatu
Maungapohatu is a settlement in the Bay of Plenty Region of New Zealand's North Island. Located in a remote area of the Urewera bush country about 20 kilometres (12 mi) north of Lake Waikaremoana, it was founded by Rua Tapunui Kenana in 1907 and was substantially rebuilt twice during the next two decades. At its peak more than 500 people lived there but today it is once more a very sparsely populated place.
Maungapohatu
Maungapōhatu | |
---|---|
Etymology: rocky mountain[1] | |
Maungapohatu Location of Maungapohatu | |
Coordinates: 38°34′14″S 177°05′43″E | |
Country | New Zealand |
Island | North Island |
Region | Bay of Plenty |
Territorial authority | Whakatāne District |
Settled by Māori | 1907 |
Elevation | 600 m (2,000 ft) |
Time zone | UTC+12 |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+13 (NZDT) |
It lies at the foot of the 1366 metre mountain of the same name, which is sacred to the Tūhoe iwi.[2]
Maungapōhatu Marae, also known as Te Māpou Marae, is the traditional meeting grounds of the Tūhoe hapū of Tamakaimoana; it includes the Tane-nui-a-rangi meeting house.[3] In October 2020, the Government committed $490,518 from the Provincial Growth Fund to upgrade the marae, creating 21 jobs.[4]
Urewera Ranges
Te Urewera is a thickly forested hill country to the northeast of Lake Taupō. It is the historical home of the Tūhoe, an iwi known for their stance on Māori sovereignty. Today, much of the land is contained within Te Urewera National Park, which has an area of 2,126 square kilometres (821 sq mi) and which in 2013 had a population of only 2,133.[5] The State Highway 38 is the only major arterial road that crosses it, running from Waiotapu near Rotorua via Murupara to Wairoa.
Because of its isolation and dense forest, Te Urewera remained largely untouched by British colonists until the early 20th century; in the 1880s it was still in effect under Māori control and few Pākehā were prepared to risk entering the area.[6]
Following Premier Richard Seddon’s visit to Te Urewera in 1894 the Tūhoe chief Tutakangahau requested a Union Flag from the government. This flew at the Maungapohatu marae from at least 1897. The words “Kotahi Te Ture/Mo Nga Iwi E Rua/ Maungapōhatu” (One law/for both peoples/Maungapōhatu) were stitched onto it and it had been created as a sign of a peaceful relationship with the Crown.[7] The words were chosen to affirm “the important principle that the dominant culture should not pass laws discriminating against Māori.”[8]
Rua Tapunui Kenana
Rua Tapunui Kenana, a grandson of Tutakangahau, was a Māori prophet, faith healer and land rights activist. He claimed to have been born in 1869 at Maungapohatu, although this is disputed.[2][9] His father was killed fighting for Te Kooti, a guerrilla fighter and the founder of the Ringatū religion.[10]
Brought up amongst the Tūhoe[9] Rua left in 1887 and worked on sheep stations in the Gisborne and Bay of Plenty districts.[11] After a mystical experience on the mountain of Maungapohatu, Rua claimed to be the successor to Te Kooti and the Māori brother of Christ. On 12 April 1906 he prophesied that on 25 June he would "ascend the throne" and that King Edward VII would arrive at Gisborne. When the King failed to appear, Rua announced: "I am really that King. Here I am, with all my people."[9] Rua then returned to Maungapohatu where he set himself up as a prophet and announced his plan for the creation of the City of God at Maungapohatu.[9]
The construction of Maungapohatu was to be a conscious recreation of the biblical city of Jerusalem.[2] The population called themselves the Iharaira, the Israelites, and Rua took the name "Moses". The construction of the community was to mark the beginning of their trials and a test their faithfulness. Maungapohatu was their "City of Redemption. Here, one day, the promises would all be completed and the confiscated lands and the autonomy of the people restored".[2][9]
Settlement history
Early years
Rua arrived at this isolated outpost as the winter of 1907 set in. During the first year the potato crop failed and there were no pigs to be had. At least fifty people died that winter, most of them children, from the inadequacy of the houses, an outbreak of typhoid which came from the valley camps, and a measles epidemic which devastated the community. Sometimes there was nothing to eat but huhu, and the coarse toi leaves, normally used only for clothing. Nonetheless, from this inauspicious beginning the community struggled on to a first summer of plenty. Two groups had come together to build te pa tapu o te atua, the sacred pā of the Lord; about half the entire Tuhoe tribe; and the Whakatohea, who through confiscation were almost landless. To signify the union between these two Mataatua tribes, Rua constructed the "House of the Lord", Hiruharama Hou, built with two gables. One side was for the Tuhoe and the other for the Whakatohea.[12]
Built between 1907–1908, Maungapohatu "was an impressive settlement with its own courthouse, bank, and council room. The streets were lit with oil lamps and it had its own water system, with separated pools for washing and cooking. The families set up their own rules of conduct, which were enforced through a council of elders and their prophet leader. In these first years, about 500 or 600 people lived at Maungapohatu."[2] Rua attempted to create a new system of land ownership and land usage with a strong communal basis but which also emphasised the concept of family ownership of property.
The concepts of tapu and noa were central to the design, with different sections to reflect these two ideas. The sacred area, which included the civic amenities and sleeping houses was called the wahi tapu and fenced off from the surrounding noa area where buildings for the preparation of food and other mundane activities were built. The Bible was also a significant influence. The Hiruharama Hou was inspired by the instructions David had been given for Solomon's House as described in the Books of Chronicles and Kings.[13][14]
A two-storied structure called the Hīona (Zion) was constructed that became the parliament from where community affairs were administered. This circular meeting house was decorated with a design of blue clubs (Rua's personal symbol) and yellow diamonds, and stood within the inner sanctum of the pa. This was Rua's “Council Chamber and Court House” – also known as “Rua's Temple”. Rua thought it was modelled on the Jerusalem Temple (even though his chamber was not to be a place of worship), but the actual model was the present day Dome of the Rock on Jerusalem's Temple Mount, a Muslim holy site. The internal design with its two doors, winding staircase and "windows of narrow lights" was more solidly based on the biblical record. The unique cylindrical shape was a radical departure from traditional North Island Māori architecture.[10][13]
However, the authorities saw Rua Kenana as a disruptive influence and targeted him with the Tohunga Suppression Act of 1907, which banned traditional Māori healers from using herbs and other healing methods which were part of their traditional medicine.[15] By 1908 Rua's struggle for power had brought the Tuhoe to the brink of civil war and the Prime Minister Sir Joseph Ward intervened in an attempt to curb the prophet's influence.[12]
Second phase
By the close of 1913, Maungapohatu had declined. The Whakatohea had left and it had become a community of about 30 families. In 1914 the community broke up of its own accord and 20,000 acres which the Tuhoe had set aside in 1907, to be “a habitation for God and man”, were partitioned. Rua left and the Hiona was abandoned and became used as a hay store. In 1914 a new meeting house in a more traditional style was built -Tane Nui A Rangi - ‘Great Tāne of the Heavens’.[16] Even so, controversy was seldom far away. Rua was fined for sly grogging in 1910 and in 1915 served a short gaol sentence for a similar offence. On his return from prison he attempted to reconstruct Maungapohatu. The pa, abandoned circa 1913, was rebuilt with the help of hundred men who worked for three hours each day for three days, "a ritual resurrection of a new and more perfect community".[17] This came in tandem with a relaxation of various tapu observances including the dismantling of the fence between the tapu and noa areas.[13]
Rua attempted to persuade the Tuhoe to boycott military service during the First World War.[18] This was taken by the establishment as sedition and finally gave the Government and Rua's detractors the incentive to intervene against him and the Maungapohatu community. On 2 April 1916, seventy heavily armed police officers arrived to arrest Rua. Because the village was so remote, the police came well-equipped, using wagons and pack-horses, and camped on the way.
There are conflicting versions of what took place when the police arrived. There was no violent resistance from Rua personally[10] but he refused to submit to arrest, and his supporters fought a brisk half-hour gun battle with the police. In this exchange, Rua's son Toko and a Māori bodyguard were killed and two Māori and four constables were wounded. When the hostilities ceased, Rua was arrested and transported to Rotorua. He was eventually found not guilty of sedition but guilty of “moral resistance” to the police[19] and sentenced to 12 months hard labour to be followed by 18 months imprisonment.[7] He served 9 months in Mt Eden Prison, Auckland.[10]
Third and final phase
The costs of defence at the various trials had ruined the community financially as it had to sell stock and land to meet the debt. The community was even ordered to pay the costs of the entire police operations and raid at Maungapohatu. Although the supreme court had found Rua's arrest illegal and a legal petition had been drafted to Parliament on 1 May 1917 on behalf of the Maungapohatu people calling for a full public inquiry into the events of April 1916, the behaviour of the police there and the subsequent intimidation of witnesses, no compensation was ever offered.[20]
When Rua returned to the Urewera, the settlement was divided, the lands overgrown and much of the community had relocated. The Presbyterian Mission under Rev. John Laughton had moved into Maungapohatu and was teaching Presbyterian Christianity and pākehā value systems. Rua had banned pākehā schools from the original community but a circular schoolhouse, described as being “in the most isolated spot where any school is maintained in New Zealand”[21] was still in active use in the early 1920s.[7] Possibly as part of a ritual purification Rua had both the Hiruharama Hou and the Hiona destroyed.[13] A typhoid epidemic broke out in the community in early in 1925 and after Laughton left in 1926 Rua organised the construction of a whole village for the third and final time.[22] The new design reflected Rua Kenana's transition from a style of Old Testament prophet to that of New Testament pacifist.[13] Houses of slab and shingle with galvanised iron roofs were built. There were two main streets and the houses were grouped carefully along them.[22] He claimed this rebuilding was to prepare for the end of the world but when this failed to happen he blamed his followers. Eventually he moved downstream to Matahi in the eastern Bay of Plenty, where he lived until his death in 1937."[9][7]
Nonetheless, the community continued to thrive for a while, facilities including two tennis courts and an open-air dance floor. Between 1927 and 1929 Maungapohatu had a population of about 150 and this period was remembered fondly by those who lived there.[23] However, by 1936 the population had declined to 21 families.[24] Binney (1983) notes that the main reasons for the long term decline of the settlement included the difficulties of finding paid work while living at such a remote location, the nature of the terrain, which is "fiercely daunting for farming", and the community's inability to find any sources of capital for redevelopment. "The poor had subsidised the state, but the state had remained substantially indifferent to them."[25]
During the 1930s two botanists, the "Tramping Girls of Auckland", Lucy Cranwell and Lucy Moore conducted a field trip to research the flora of Mt. Maungapohatu. [26] Cranwell wrote "we set off at 3 am in a PDW truck back to the Papatotara Saddle and from there trudged the deep-worn horse track across three steep ridges to Rua's Pa at the base of our mountain ... an almost vertical surveyer's route took us to the flattish summit just as the sun was setting. When dawn came the mountain plants were covered with a delicate layer of frost."[27]
Modern day
Ngāi Tūhoe had donated 16,000ha of land to the government in 1922 so that roads could be built to connect Maungapohatu with the eastern Bay of Plenty and Ruatahuna but they were not constructed. In 1964 a road was finally built to the tiny settlement by a timber company and more than 1500 people attended the opening celebrations. For a few years the milling operations brought "modest prosperity to this isolated and impoverished area, which had never recovered from the exodus of most of its inhabitants" after the close of Rua's experiments in collective living. Little now remains of Maungapohatu, the population of which was estimated at only 15 in the 1960s.[28]
In 2006 the annual synod of the Diocese of Waiapu passed a motion apologising for the Anglican Church's role in the 1907 Tohunga Suppression Act and in May of that year Archbishop Brown Turei and other church members made a pilgrimage to Maungapohatu. The church also announced plans to contribute to the rebuilding of the Maungapohatu marae.[15] In 2014 the Maungapōhatu flag, which had been removed by the police in 1916 at the time of Rua Kenana's arrest, was returned by Auckland Museum to the Tūhoe as part of "the Museums’ commitment to addressing historic ownership issues associated with taonga."[7]
People from Maungapohatu
- Rua Tapunui Kenana (1869-1937) - see above.
- Te Pairi Tuterangi (d. 1954) a Tūhoe leader and artist.
- Te Whenuanui (d. 1907) a Tūhoe chief.
- Wi Whitu (1908–1983) a blacksmith and exhumer, his sister was one of Rua's wives.
Citations
- "Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori - Māori Language Week. Page 5 – 1000 Māori place names". New Zealand History. Retrieved 7.01.2018.
- Binney (1983) p. 353
- "Maungapōhatu (Te Māpou)". maorimaps.com. Te Potiki National Trust.
- "Marae Announcements" (Excel). growregions.govt.nz. Provincial Growth Fund. 9 October 2020.
- "Bay of Plenty places: Page 13 Inland Urewera". Te Ara. Retrieved 5.01.2018.
- King (2003) p. 295
- "The Maungapōhatu flag". Auckland Museum. Retrieved 3.01.2018
- Binney (2009) p. 427
- Binney (1996)
- "Prophet Rua Kenana". ngaituhoe.com. Retrieved 5.01.2018.
- McLintock, A. H. (1966) "Rua Tapanui Hepetipa, or Kenana Rua Hepetipa" Te Ara. Retrieved 13 February 2015
- Binney et al (1979) pp. 45–56
- Brown (2007) pp. 25-28
- 2 Chronicles 3:4, 7, 15-17 & 1 Kings 6:3
- "Church apology after 99 years". (2006-09-18) Hawkes Bay Today: New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 6.01.2018.
- Binney (1983) p. 354
- Binney (1983) p. 357
- Sinclair (1969) p. 274
- Binney et al (1979) pp. 119-124
- Binney et al (1979) pp. 131-132
- Binney (1983) p. 362 quoting Laughton
- Binney (1983) pp. 358-60
- Binney (1983) p. 362
- Binney (1983) p. 361
- Binney (1983) pp. 365, 366, 387
- "Lucy Cranwell" Outsidethesquare. Retrieved 7.01.2018
- Cameron, Ewen K. (2000) "Obituary - Lucy May Cranwell, MA, DSc, DSc(Hon), FLS(Lond.), FRSNZ, 1907-2000".(pdf) New Zealand Journal of Botany 38. pp 527-35. Retrieved 7.01.2018.
- "Opening of first road to Maungapōhatu". New Zealand History. Retrieved 3.01.2018
References
- Binney, Judith Chaplin, Gillian and Wallace, Craig. (1979) Mihaia: the prophet Rua Kenana and his community at Maungapohatu. Oxford University Press.
- Binney, J. Volume 92 (1983) "Maungapohatu revisited: or, how the government underdeveloped a Maori community". The Journal of the Polynesian Society. 92, No. 3 pp. 353–392.
- Binney, Judith (1996) "Rua Kēnana – Tūhoe prophet". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. 3. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
- Binney, Judith (2009) Encircled Lands. BWB.
- Brown, Deidre (2007) "Accommodating God: The Influence of Christianity on Maori Architecture". Pacific Arts 6: Special Focus: Pacific Architecture pp. 24–30. Pacific Arts Association/JSTOR.
- King, Michael (2003). The Penguin History of New Zealand. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-301867-4.
- Sinclair, Keith (1969). A History of New Zealand. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-020344-8.