Tuini Ngāwai
{{Short description|Māori songwriter}}
{{Use New Zealand English|date=September 2024}}
Tuini Moetū Haangū Ngāwai (5 May 1910 – 12 August 1965) was a Māori songwriter, performer, teacher, shearer and cultural adviser.{{DNZB|title=Tuini Moetu Haangu Ngawai|first= Anaru Kingi|last= Takurua|id=5n11|accessdate=23 April 2017}}{{Cite web|date=2016-06-20|title=Te Papa hosts biggest Kaumātua Kapa Haka yet|url=https://www.tepapa.govt.nz/about/press-and-media/press-releases/2016-news-and-media-releases/te-papa-hosts-biggest-kaumatua|access-date=2021-05-01|website=Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, NZ|language=en}} Through contemporising Māori waiata during World War II, Ngāwai contributed to the Māori renaissance.{{Cite web|title=Tuini Ngāwai|url=https://ngataonga.org.nz/collections/catalogue/catalogue-item?record_id=226472|access-date=2021-05-01|website=Ngā Taonga Sound and Vision|language=en-NZ}}
Biography
File:View of settlement at Te Ariuru at the northern end of Tokomaru Bay (20877773813).jpg
Her iwi is Ngāti Porou and her hapū is Te Whanau a Ruataupare. Born at Tokomaru Bay, her twin sister died in infancy, and Moetū was given the name Tuini, a transliteration of twin. Ngāwai taught Māori culture in schools, leaving in 1946 to work as a shearing gang supervisor.
Her niece Ngoi Pēwhairangi was also a composer. The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa holds a photograph of Ngāwai and Ngoi Pewhairangi performing with Ngāwai's concert party Te Hokowhitu-ā-Tū.
Performance work
Tuini Ngāwai composed many songs using European tunes, to encourage Māori pride to raise morale among Māori at home and at the war. Her legacy is recognised by contemporary kapa haka performers and composers, and it is thought she created over 200 concert party works.
She was considered a protégé of Āpirana Ngata.{{Cite book|last=Coney|first=Sandra|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/29192742|title=Standing in the sunshine : a history of New Zealand women since they won the vote|date=1993|publisher=Viking|others=Liz Greenslade, Charlotte Macdonald, Andrea Brownlie, Jacqueline Amoamo, Raewyn MacKenzie|isbn=0-670-84628-7|location=Auckland, N.Z.|oclc=29192742}} Many, such as "Hoki mai e tama mā" and "E te Hokowhitu-a-Tū" (to the tune of "In the Mood") are still sung today. In 1939 she founded the Te Hokowhitu-ā-Tū Māori kapa haka group, this was to acknowledge the local men and boys who went to war with C Company as part of the 28th Māori Battalion.{{Citation| publisher = Auckland University of Technology| last = Ka'ai-Mahuta| first = Rachael Te Āwhina| title = He kupu tuku iho mō tēnei reanga: a critical analysis of Waiata and Haka as commentaries and archives of Māori political history| date = 2010-10-21}} The religious song "Arohaina Mai" became the unofficial hymn of the Māori Battalion. Recordings of some of her work are held in the sound collection of Ngā Taonga Sound and Vision and the Alexander Turnbull Library.{{Cite web|title=[Waiata by Tuini Ngāwai]|url=https://www.ngataonga.org.nz/collections/catalogue/catalogue-item?record_id=223929|access-date=2021-05-01|website=ngataonga.org.nz|language=en}}{{Cite web|last=specified|first=Not|title=Te Hokowhitu-a-Tu Concert Party|url=https://digitalnz.org/records/43081595|access-date=2021-05-01|website=DigitalNZ|language=en}}
Ngāwai's songs were used to promote and demand the honouring of the Treaty of Waitangi by Māori activists.
Death
Ngāwai died in August 1965. Her funeral ceremony (tangihanga) was held in the meeting house Te Hono-Ki-Rarotonga, at Pakirikiri Marae in Tokomaru Bay.{{Cite web|title=Poroporoaki to Tuini Ngāwai by Hunāra Hiiroki Tāngaere in 1965 from Whaikōrero|url=https://www.rnz.co.nz/collections/whaikorero/tuini-ngaawai-by-hunra-hiiroki-tngaere|access-date=2021-05-01|website=RNZ |language=en-nz}}
Awards
In 2022 Ngāwai was inducted into the New Zealand Music Hall of Fame.{{Cite web |date=2022-09-15 |title=Influential Māori songwriters inducted into NZ Music Hall of Fame |url=https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/te-manu-korihi/474798/influential-maori-songwriters-inducted-into-nz-music-hall-of-fame |access-date=2022-09-15 |website=RNZ |language=en-nz}}
References
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External links
- [http://teaohou.natlib.govt.nz/journals/teaohou/issue/Mao14TeA/c29.html 1956 Interview in Te Aou Hou magazine]
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Category:People from Tokomaru Bay
Category:New Zealand Māori women singers
Category:20th-century New Zealand women singers
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