9am Mihi whakatau at Te Papa/Te Hau ki Turanga whare 9.30am

TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
Te Hau ki Turanga Wananga
9am to 1pm, 8 November 2014
7 November 2014
Whanau will be staying at Taraika Marae, Wellington High School, Taranaki Street, Wellington
8 November 2014
9am
Mihi whakatau at Te Papa/Te Hau ki Turanga whare
9.30am
Kai
10am
Wananga begins
1. Presentation by Te Papa Team:
a. Timetable and consequences
i.
“Immediate” return of whare
ii.
Return by 2019
b. What is involved in the testing of the original pane
c. What is involved in the testing of the heke:
i.
State of whare during heke testing
ii.
Replacement of 4 heke
d. The team and the involvement of women in the testing process
e. General matters
2. Te Hau ki Turanga Trust:
a. General update since May 2014 Wananga
b. Overall tikanga for the whare
c. Support for women involved in testing process
d. Support for the whare remaining open with replacement heke and testing process
e. Involvement of Rongowhakaata during the testing process through a
Rongowhakaata carver
f. Next steps
3. Closing Karakia and blessing of the Whare for testing works
12pm Lunch
1pm
Rongowhakaata departs Te Papa
Can whanau attending please register with Sammy Jo Matete (Ph: 0800 766 469 or
trust@rongowhakaata.iwi.nz) for accommodation (Taraika Marae) and/or catering.
The background information follows. Any queries on this pack can be sent to
willie.teaho@icsolutions.co.nz or mobile: 021768462 prior to the wananga. Further information can
be found at the Rongowhakaata website and Facebook page.
Layne Harvey, Chair
1|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
Te Hau ki Turanga Trust Minutes
Te Runanga o Turanganui a Kiwa Library
10.08am, 24 October 2014
Present:
Layne Harvey (Chair) and Miria Pomare – online
Tutekawa Wyllie (Deputy Chair), Jimmy Whaitiri and Robyn Rauna
In Attendance: Willie Te Aho (Secretariat) - online
Karakia:
Tutekawa
Apologies:
Motion 1:
That the apology from Angus Ngarangioue be received
Moved: Layne Seconded: Robyn
CARRIED
Minutes of the Previous Meeting:
Motion 2:
That the minutes of the meeting held 25 September 2014 are a true and correct
record.
Moved: Robyn Seconded: Tutekawa
Matters Arising:
CARRIED
There were no matters arising.
Secretariat Report:
A. Background Information
Motion 3: “That the Te Hau ki Turanga Trust trustees (“trustees”):
a. Receive the e-mails from the Te Hau ki Turanga Trust (“the Trust”) Secretariat on 29
September 2014 and 1 October 2014 that were sent to all trustees;
b. Receive the response from Te Papa Tongarewa (“Te Papa”) to the questions raised at
the last trustees meeting held on 25 September 2014;
c. Note that all recommendations are based on Rongowhakaata Deed of Settlement
(“Deed of Settlement”), the Rongowhakaata Claims Settlement Act 2012 (“the
legislation”), the Te Hau ki Turanga Deed of Trust (“Trust Deed”), the Funding
Agreement signed between the Trust and the Minister, the e-mails from the Trust
Secretariat on 29 September 2014 and 1 October 2014 that were sent to all Te Hau ki
Turanga Trust trustees and the response from Te Papa.”
Moved:
B.
Robyn
Seconded: Layne
CARRIED
Wananga at Te Papa – 8 November 2014
Motion 4: That the Trust support the wananga on Te Hau ki Turanga taking place at Te Papa on
8 November 2014 with:
a. the same format as the wananga held on 10 May 2014;
2|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
b. the issues outlined in the Te Papa report and this report being discussed;
c. Te Papa funding the bus and the catering at Te Papa; and
d. all other costs, consistent with the wananga on 10 May 2014, being met by the
Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust (“RIT”).
Moved: Robyn
Seconded: Jimmy
CARRIED
Miria Pomare in attendance.
Motion 5: That korero before the wananga and at the wananga confirm that with the
appropriate karakia taking place:
a. the whare can remain open while the heke are being tested and eventually restored;
and
b. women can work on the testing, restoration and reconstruction of the whare.
Moved:
Robyn
Abstentions:
Seconded:
Miria
Tutekawa
CARRIED
1. Tutekawa noted that he abstained because he believes that the overall tikanga of the whare
needs to be sorted. Although there have been wananga, no one has stood up and said “this
is the tikanga of the whare”. The secretariat noted that this will be an issue for the
upcoming wananga.
C.
Ownership of Te Hau ki Turanga
Motion 6:
1. “That the trustees note that under the Deed of Settlement Te Hau ki Turanga is not the full
house as it appears in Te Papa but the original parts that were taken from Orakaiapu in 1867
which is less than 60% of the full house as it appears in Te Papa.
2. That the trustees note that the owner of Te Hau ki Turanga is the Rongowhakaata
Settlement Trust as noted in the Deed of Settlement and legislation.
3. That the Te Hau ki Turanga Trust seek either:
a. The agreement of the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust and the Rongowhakaata Settlement
Trust to transfer the Te Hau ki Turanga title from the Rongowhakaata Settlement
Trust to the Te Hau ki Turanga Trust; or
b. The agreement of the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust and the Rongowhakaata Settlement
Trust to seek a binding vote from all registered beneficiaries over the age of 18 years
of age on whether or not the title for Te Hau ki Turanga is transferred from the
Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust to Te Hau ki Turanga Trust”.
Moved:
Robyn
Seconded: Tutekawa
CARRIED
1. It was also noted that:
a. The trustees need to receive the full inventory of what was taken from Orakaiapu;
b. A repatriation plan needs to be developed with Te Papa as a part of the Relationship
Agreement which covers:
3|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
i. The repatriation of original parts back to Te Hau;
ii. The repatriation of non original parts from Te Hau to the hapu that the parts
were gifted from;
iii. The repatriation of other Rongowhakaata taonga in other museums around
the world back to Rongowhakaata;
1. With the need for internal protocols for taonga where they are
claimed by hapu or whanau.
D.
Immediate Return of Te Hau ki Turanga to Turanga
Motion 7:
1. That the trustees:
a. note that under the Deed of Settlement signed by Rongowhakaata and the Crown, Te
Hau ki Turanga can be returned earlier with the agreement of Te Papa;
b. note that the Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust ownership of Te Hau ki Turanga is
limited to the original parts that were taken from Orakaiapu;
c. receive the report from Te Papa;
d. note the view of Te Papa that the non original parts of the house will require
consultation with other Iwi before being removed and, due to other commitments,
any de-installation would not be able to be addressed until April 2015;
e. agree that a full discussion with Te Papa on the timing of immediate return of Te Hau
ki Turanga and the consequences of that return take place at the agreed wananga to
take place at Te Papa on 8 November 2014.
2. That the trustees reconsider the option for an immediate return of Te Hau ki Turanga to Turanga
after the wananga on 8 November 2014 once the full consequences have been appreciated by
the whanau who attend the wananga.
Moved: Robyn
E.
Seconded: Miria
CARRIED
Alternative Option – Return to Orakaiapu
Motion 8: That the trustees:
1. note that in the Funding Agreement signed on 18 August 2014 there is a requirement to
identify another site other than Waiohiharore.
2. agree that a discussion take place with the owners of Orakaiapu 2 block to discuss the
possibility of Te Hau ki Turanga returning to Orakaiapu where it was taken from in 1867.
Moved:
F.
Robyn
Seconded: Tutekawa
CARRIED
Permanent Onsite Rongowhakaata Carver at Te Papa
Motion 9: That the trustees:
a. agree with the principle that a Rongowhakaata carver participate in the testing of the
pane and heke to ensure a transfer of knowledge to Rongowhakaata and to ensure
Rongowhakaata tikanga is observed at all times with respect to Te Hau ki Turanga;
b. note the view of Te Papa to a Rongowhakaata carver overseeing the testing of the pane
and the heke;
c. agree that a discussion take place with Te Papa staff on 8 November 2014 with regard
to:
I.
the testing of the pane;
II.
the testing of the heke;
4|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
the making of 4 replacement heke;
the resourcing that Te Papa can contribute to this work; and
the resourcing that the Trust may have to contribute to this work.
agree that the trustees make a decision on funding and the carver at the final
trust meeting on 24 November 2014 when the Trust funds come off investment.
Moved: Robyn
1.
2.
Layne gave his apologies for the rest of the meeting as he is in the middle of a
hearing that he needs to return to. Tutekawa took the Chair.
THKT Trust Elections and Appointments
Motion 10:
That the trustees:
1. note that under the Trust Deed all trustees and secretariat appointment come to an
end in December 2014.
2. note that the 3 Iwi appointments (Ngai Tamanuhiri, Rongowhakaata and Te Aitanga
a Mahaki) to THKTT, as approved in July 2011 and Trust Deed, will be completed by 6
December 2014.
3. note that the THKTT trustees will, at their first meeting in December 2014, appoint
their Chair, Deputy Chair and Secretariat.
4. agree that the process for the 3 Ngati Kaipoho representatives will be the same as
2012 with:
a. Public notification to confirm:
b. Date of hui to appoint trustees
c. Voting by:
d. Those who are registered with the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust;
e. Are over the age of 18 years of age as at 1 November 2014;
f. Have Ngati Kaipoho noted as their hapu on their registration form.
g. Nominations from the floor by 2 eligible voters
h. Chaired by the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust Chair or Deputy Chair
i. Scrutineered by Te Runanga o Turanganui a Kiwa
5. subject to the availability of the Manutuke marae or alternative venue, the Ngati
Kaipoho election date be 1pm on 6 December 2014.
Moved:
H.
CARRIED
The trustees asked that there be transparency with all appointments.
The secretariat reiterated that Kiwa will be approached to lead this work because he is the
coordinator of the carvers within the conservation plan that has been approved by the
trustees. This approach will be openly outlined at the wananga. The trustees will then make
a final decision at the meeting on 24 November 2014 once we have both the feedback from
Te Papa on resourcing and the outcome of the wananga.
11.05am
G.
Seconded: Miria
Robyn
Seconded: Tutekawa
CARRIED
The Role of RIT with Te Hau ki Turanga
Motion 11:
1. That the trustees agree that the report from the Trust to the AGM next month include the
statement that since 2011 the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust that has provided over $200,000 to
ensure the progress of issues relating to Te Hau ki Turanga Trust including:
5|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
a. The legal drafting costs for the establishment of the trust;
b. The costs of the hikoi to Whakatane, Rotorua and Wellington including transport,
accommodation and meals;
c. The costs for all other trustee meetings including telephone conferences;
d. The fees for Jody Wyllie through two contracts (feasibility and conservation plan &
funding agreement) including travel to and from Wellington;
e. The costs for the wananga at Te Papa in May 2014 and the related travel and
accommodation for whanau and presenters;
f. The costs for the wananga on 8 November 2014 in Te Papa and the related travel
and accommodation for whanau and presenters.
2. That the trustees report to the AGM that the Trust has completed over the past 2 years:
a. Established the separate legal entity for Te Hau ki Turanga in accordance with the
Iwi determination in July 2011 (December 2012);
b. Viewed firsthand and discussed with key people the different models of whare
protection and kaupapa promotion particularly at Mataatua whare, Te Puia and
Wharewaka (April 2013);
c. Received all the detailed background from each of these examples – including
budgets through to insurances for Mataatua whare (August 2013);
d. Completed a conservation plan for Te Hau ki Turanga (December 2013);
e. Completed an independent feasibility study which identifies options for Te Hau ki
Turanga (April 2014);
f. Completed a funding agreement for administration, specific site options and part
conservation plan (August 2014); and
g. Continuously, throughout the past 2 years, met with the Minister, MCH officials and
Te Papa officials as well as maintaining a communications plan with our whanau
through wananga, hui a iwi, AGMs, web site and Face Book.
Moved: Jimmy
I.
CARRIED
Relationship Agreement
Motion 12.
That the trustees note that the Relationship Agreement with Te Papa will be
considered at the next Trust meeting after the upcoming wananga.
Moved: Robyn
1.
Seconded: Miria
Seconded: Miria
CARRIED
In response to questions Willie noted that some Relationship Agreement options that will be
considered will include Tamaki and Whakatane (with respect to Mataatua whare).
General Business
It was agreed that the outcome of this meeting will be outlined to the Rongowhakaata Settlement
Trust and Iwi Trust. The focus will be on the ownership issue and seeking agreement to either (1)
the agreed transfer of title or (2) agreement that this issue be put out to the registered beneficiaries
for those over the age of 18 years to make a decision.
The next meeting will be held at 5.30pm in Rotorua on 24 November 2014. The venue to be
confirmed.
The meeting closed with a karakia from Tutekawa at 11.18am
6|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
Joint Meeting of the Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust/Iwi Trust and Te Hau ki Turanga Trust
11.25am, 24 October 2014
TROTAK Board Room
Present:
A quorum from the Te Hau ki Turanga Trust and the Rongowhakaata Settlement
Trust/Iwi Trust
In Attendance: Willie Te Aho (online) and George Brown
Agreed Motion:
The Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust/Iwi Trust and Te Hau ki Turanga Trust agree:
a. When the options regarding the return of Te Hau ki Turanga are put to the registered
Rongowhakaata beneficiaries over the age of 18 years, the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust and the
Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust will also seek a binding vote from all registered
beneficiaries over the age of 18 years of age on whether or not the title for Te Hau ki
Turanga is transferred from the Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust to Te Hau ki Turanga
Trust.
b. The Rongowhakaata Settlement Trust will lead the ratification process due its legal
ownership of the Te Hau ki Turanga, but this will be done in collaboration with the Te Hau ki
Turanga Trust.
Moved: George Ria
Seconded:
Tutekawa Wyllie
CARRIED
7|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
From: Rhonda Paku [mailto:RhondaP@tepapa.govt.nz]
Sent: Monday, 13 October 2014 11:52 a.m.
To: Willie Te Aho
Cc: Arapata Hakiwai; Carolyn Roberts-Thompson
Subject: Response to issues raised by Iwi - next steps for THKT
Kia ora Willie
With a fresh pair of eyes today, I’ve had a chance to ‘tidy up’ the responses I sent to you last Friday
night. I hope this makes it in time for your consideration and happy to get your feedback and
comments at your soonest convenience so I can turn it around within your timeframe.
Noho ora mai koe
Mauriora
Rhonda Paku – Ngāti Kahungunu| Tuhoe| Ngāti Ruapani
Deputy Kaihautū | Senior Curator Mātauranga Māori
NEXT STEPS FOR TE HAU KI TŪRANGA
IN RESPONSE TO ISSUES RAISED BY RONGOWHAKAATA IWI
14 October, 2014
1.
Resourcing a carver to oversee testing work on the pane
2. Firstly, for Te Papa to have a carver from the iwi to oversee the mahi being undertaken on the
pane, is ideal and we welcome the opportunity to discuss this further with the iwi – we have a
modest resource in our budget for this kaupapa and will be happy to have a discussion about
how an iwi observer could be supported in this phase of work and what resource is
needed. However, to help clarify those discussions, it is important to understand the work to be
undertaken on the pane and other whare components (because it is likely to be similar). The
reason for the testing and analysis in this phase is to:
a. Identify the different paints
b. Identify the pigments and binders used
c. Identify the different layers of paint
d. Identify and document the patterns underneath
e. Discover the extent of original paint left
f. Discover the condition of the original paint.
8|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
3. Examination of the paint that will be done at Te Papa includes passing the pane with different
types of light for in-depth information that cannot be detected by the human eye;
a. Raking light photography
b. UV photography
c. IR reflectography
4. A small sample of the paint will also be removed from the pane to be sent away for testing.
Initially the work on the pane and other elements will be intermittent as the testing has to be
conducted at other locations/ institutes where their laboratories are better equipped for this
level of testing than ours (i.e., at GNS and Victoria University and possibly laboratories over in
Australia). It may be several weeks before we get the results back – but our colleagues at the
other institutes should be able to give us timeframes once we get underway.
5. In our planning process we had allowed for 6 months in total for the testing of carvings and the
heke. We had also allowed for another 2-3 months to develop treatments to remove the paint
with - we may have to develop a number of treatments depending on the outcome of those
results.
6. Therefore the role of the iwi observer may be fairly minimal in this phase. The removal of a
sample from the pane will be relatively straight forward and likely to take no longer than a day.
However, the opportunity will be for the iwi observer to examine the carving in more detail.
7. It is also possible that as well as having oversight of the sampling and testing of the pane, the
role of the observer might include, the following tasks;
a. Assisting collection managers in the handling of the pane;
b. Documentation of the work on the pane (including the option to photograph or film
it; or be on hand while one of our in-house photographers records the process);
c. Assisting with the removal of the first few heke and replacing them with the heke
that the iwi will have made in the interim;
d. Full knowledge transfer between Te Papa staff and iwi observer and shared
experience (which enhances their own knowledge) with Te Papa’s team.
2.
Ability for Te Papa to return Te Hau immediately (the soonest that this can practically be
done) and the consequences;
8. In responding to this question the most important matter for Te Papa is ensuring that we have
completed full diligence in terms of our responsibilities as the National Museum of New Zealand;
that we have at least met our legal, cultural and professional obligations under our Act, our
Collection Management Policy and the Code of Ethics & Professional Practice.
9. The non-original components are actually part of the national collection and would therefore
need to be deaccessioned. On a tikanga level, we will want to ensure that the process upholds
the mana of the whare and the non-original components of the whare too– which we recognise
is a key concern for us all as we work through the challenges ahead. So full consultation with the
other iwi will be essential.
9|Page
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
10. Also, Te Papa will want to be sure that when the whare leaves our guardianship it is looking its
best and is well packed and prepared for the journey home; that all other iwi relationships are
intact and that we understand what our ongoing obligations and responsibilities are to each
other and the whare.
3.
Response #1 –Immediate return: No testing or paint conservation work is undertaken
11. Te Papa is committed to ensuring a robust and full consultation with other associated iwi who
contributed elements to the house be undertaken before deinstallation of the Whare to
determine the future of those elements. However we cannot pre-determine the time that will
take.
12. At present museum staff are fully committed to a very full exhibition programme as well as
research, publications, presentations, other iwi negotiations etc. For the next 6 months, the
compliment of staff needed to help de-install the whare, clean each element and do basic repair
work (e.g., replacing paua eyes) then pack and crate the house for the journey home, are all
engaged with the development of significant exhibitions especially our WW100 exhibition,
Gallipoli – The Scale of Our War, the 175th Anniversary of the Treaty and our 4th season of ‘Nga
Toi’ as well as others. This means that we do not have staff or enough space available to take
the whare down and do the cleaning and repair work. Staff will be busy on these projects until
early next year – approximately Feb-March 2015.
13. We also will need to prepare a dedicated space to undertake this work in – our labs and
conservators are fully utilised with exhibition work at present. Adequate space will need to be
negotiated with appropriate Managers.
14. We welcome iwi involvement wherever practically possible but this mahi cannot be done
without Te Papa staff. Te Papa has legal considerations as well as technical and logistic
challenges to consider as the Whare is in a public gallery, surrounded by other taonga, may
require heavy equipment, health and safety planning, and will need to be carefully managed as
each piece is removed and taken for cleaning and packing etc
15. Each component needs to be cleaned, checked for repairs, repaired, packed and crated (or put
into specially designed containers) – this process will be done carefully and every effort will be
made to ensure that each piece is photographed and documented in our system.
16. Key risks are that the house returns in an undesirable state; that relationships with other iwi
become fractured; damage to taonga as a result of pressure to rush the process, missed
opportunities for further research.
4.
Response #2 – Retain the ‘Status quo’ –: Whare components treated returned by 2019
17. This response follows the plan outlined to iwi in July 2014 and allows Te Papa to complete the
required tasks outlined in the planning document, in a timely and carefully managed process –
ensuring that we meet our commitments and obligations while also maintaining ‘Business as
Usual’ for Te Papa.
a. Allows for robust consultation process with all other iwi/ parties;
b. Allows for a process that is inclusive of and responsive to iwi at each stage;
10 | P a g e
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
c. Ensures the process is well recorded and maximises opportunities for further
research (e.g., Derek Kawiti and 3D imaging)
d. Is included in business plans across Te Papa
e. Allows other sources of funding to be sourced to support the treatment phase of the
plan which will reduce the time to remove the paint from carvings
18. The preferred option for Te Papa is the second response. We acknowledge that this may not be
the desired option for some iwi members, but Te Papa must follow due process and with the
involvement of our most experienced staff.
5. Other matters
19. HUI - Thank you for confirming the dates 7 – 9 November for the planned return of
Rongowhakaata to Te Papa to hold their final wananga in the whare before testing
commences. It is possible that the house may not accommodate the size of the group in which
case, we can organise for part of the meeting to be held in another room at Te Papa but we will
need to book these spaces and organise catering as soon as possible as time is short.
20. Let the iwi know that unfortunately they will not be able to stay in the house or in Te Papa on
these dates. We have already agreed to hold the Maori Market Fashion Expose’ here that week
so the marae will have a full length catwalk in it until Sunday 9th. The show is running on both
Friday and Saturday nights of the weekend Rongowhakaata plan to be here and they anticipate a
large public audience.
21. Please inform your members we have budgeted to support this event - $5,000 (incl GST) – in
May a similar contribution assisted to cover the cost of the bus and catering while here. Finally,
will the hui be recorded? If we were given approval by iwi and had the resource available, could
Te Papa record the hui or aspects of it e.g., the presentations? We would be keen to discuss this
further with you.
22. KARAKIA It is important that the whanau all understand that the purpose for the karakia is
primarily so that we can begin to remove heke for them to be tested – not to close or deinstall
the whole. In previous discussions we asked if the iwi were happy for the whare to remain open
while testing is being done and we note that they agreed for it to remain open. As much as is
practically possible, we will follow that but if our team become concerned about the structural
integrity of the whare, we will review that decision with iwi.
23. REPLACEMENT HEKE - For health and safety reasons, we would prefer not to remove any of
the heke until after iwi have departed. We could do a symbolic removal of a bolt or other such
and have a member of the iwi do this.
a. Can you please confirm whether replacement heke will be made before the iwi
come down –in previous discussion we were informed that 2 – 4 replacement heke
could be made and brought down. We advise that if this is still possible, that
whoever is going to be responsible for making them, come down ASAP to measure
the heke etc.
11 | P a g e
TE HAU KI TURANGA WANGA – 8 NOVEMBER 2014
24. WAHINE INVOLVEMENT - Can the iwi confirm whether or not they will allow wahine to work on
the whare – this will raise some issues I’m sure, but our Te Papa conservators with the technical
expertise are all wahine and Dean, as you know, is not employed by Te Papa (though we know
he’s keen to contribute in whatever way he can). Also the testing may be conducted by women
who do not work here.
25. RELATIONSHIP AGREEMENT - Is there an expectation from iwi to see a draft Relationship
Agreement at the hui? We are pressed for time at the moment but ideally, this will have been
completed before work on the house commences.
12 | P a g e