Mapping of Ngāti Awa marae, land and infrastructure to enhance resilience towards natural hazards
Te whakamahere marae o Ngāti Awa, te whenuame te hanga tauakitanga i ngā aituā Māori ā-taiao
Partners
Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Awa, Rangitaiki Marae, QuakeCoRE, University of Auckland
Research Team
Professor Anthony Hōete, Zane Egginton, Kiri Henry, Pera Tipene, Tepora Hona, Varna Jagadeesh, Kaea Kerkin, Maddison Axbey, Luc-aime Meurillon
Production Team
Professor Anthony Hōete, Zane Egginton, Varna Jagadeesh, Maddison Axbey, Luc-aime Meurillon
In times of civil emergency, such as the 2012 Canterbury earthquake, marae have repeatedly demonstrated their ability to function as first responders. As exemplified by tangihanga (funeral protocols), marae have the agility and responsiveness to spontaneously accommodate large numbers of people through the provision of sleeping and cooking facilities. This research manifest as an Atlas provides a desktop audit of all Ngāti Awa marae in terms of their land, buildings and infrastructure. It is envisaged that by establishing this baseline, marae will then be able to increase their preparedness and resilience towards the risk posed by natural hazards including flooding, earthquakes, tsunami, and landslides.
Ka materahi ohotaha ana, pērā i te rū ō Waitaha 2012, āheitia ai ngā marae ki te tū hai uruparenga tuatahi. E pēnei ana i ngā tangihanga, e tau katoa ngā marae ki ēnei tūāhuatanga katoa mō te minenga mā te kaha ki te whāngai me te manaaki i te tangata. I putaina mai tēnei kaupapa hai mahere whenua e tātari ai i ngā marae o Ngāti Awa me ō rātau whenua, ngā whare me ōna punaha. Ko te manako kia whakatakotohia tēnei pūtake kōrero, e āhei ana ngā marae te manawaroa ake i ngā take ohotata ā taiao, pērā i ngā parawhenua, te rū whenua, ngā tai āniwhaniwha me te horowhenua.
“The writings of the tohunga Hāmiora Tumutara Pio are an important contribution to the reclamation of mātauranga Ngāti Awa.”
Kiri Henry
“It is tikanga paired with te reo, lore with language, which establishes a mātauranga Māori framework... I don’t translate, I interpret.”
Kiri Henry
“This Atlas is important it provides marae an opportunity to build on the information provided to create a strategic plan for the future of the hapū / community."
Kiri Henry
“Marae are the focal point for hapū. We know that marae are always in a state of preparedness - with tangihanga and large events – and so when natural hazard events occur, marae can rapidly mobilise. ”
Pera Tipene
“Marae are the only places in Aotearoa where Māori can truly be Māori. Improving the resilience of marae buildings and infrastructure is critical to sustaining Māori well-being."
The Mātauranga Māori and Earthquake Resilience Disciplinary Theme Five (DT5) has been funded by QuakeCoRE, New Zealands Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE) for seismic resilience. Established in the wake of the Canterbury earthquakes (2010-2012), QuakeCoRE’s mission is to transform the earthquake resilience of communities through innovative world-class research projects. DT5 was a partnership between QuakeCoRE, University of Auckland, Massey University and the research think tank Ngārchitecture. The website Rūsearch was conceived by Professor Anthony Hōete (Ngāti Awa) and co-created with Summer Status and Magical Animal
The Mātauranga Māori research programme will undertake community-oriented and co-designed research to create and innovate Mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge) that will support the earthquake resilience aspirations of tangata whenua.