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Eruera Tirikātene

New Zealand politician

Eruera Tirikātene

Summary

New Zealand politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameSir Eruera Tirikātene
honorific-suffix
imageEruera Tirikatene, 1950s.jpg
captionTirikātene in 1950s
office116th Minister of Forests
term_start112 December 1957
term_end112 December 1960
primeminister1Walter Nash
predecessor1Geoff Gerard
successor1Geoff Gerard
office2Minister without portfolio
term_start226 May 1943
term_end213 December 1949
primeminister2Peter Fraser
constituency_MP3Southern Maori
parliament3New Zealand
term_start33 August 1932
term_end311 January 1967
predecessor3Tuiti Makitānara
successor3Whetu Tirikatene-Sullivan
partyLabour
otherpartyRātana
birth_date
birth_placeTe Rakiwhakaputa pā, Kaiapoi, New Zealand
death_date
death_placeKaiapoi, New Zealand
resting_placeTe Kai A Te Atua Urupa, Kaiapoi
spouseRuti Matekino Solomon
relationsWhetu Tirikatene-Sullivan (daughter)
Rino Tirikatene (grandson)
children12

| honorific-prefix = The Honourable | honorific-suffix = Rino Tirikatene (grandson)

Sir Eruera Tihema Te Āika Tirikātene (5 January 1895 – 11 January 1967) was a New Zealand Māori politician of Ngāi Tahu descent. Known in early life as Edward James Te Āika Tregerthen, he was the first Rātana Member of Parliament and was elected in a by-election for Southern Maori in June 1932 after the death of Tuiti Makitānara.

He remained the MP until his death in 1967, when his daughter Whetu Tirikatene-Sullivan succeeded to the seat, also in a by-election.

Early life

After education at St Stephen's Anglican Church, Tirikātene worked on farms before enlisting in 1914 for the First World War. He served three years with the New Zealand Māori (Pioneer) Battalion, reaching the rank of sergeant, and was commended for carrying a wounded soldier while under fire.

In 1919, he was married to Ruti Matekino Solomon and the couple went on to have twelve children. In the same year, he settled on a small farm near Kaiapoi, where he also set up a dairy farm, a saw mill, a fishing fleet and a ferry service. During the Second World War in 1944 their second son, Sergeant Pilot John Aperehama, aged 21, was killed in an aircraft accident in Auckland. He was buried at Te Kai A Te Atua Urupā, Kaiapoi.

By 1921 he visited Rātana pā, and T. W. Ratana, the spiritual leader or Te Mangai of Rātana, predicted an important role for him. Te Mangai persuaded him to stay, and with his practical skills, served the movement by taking charge of the harvesting of Rātana lands.

Election to Parliament

As the Rātana movement developed into a political movement, Eruera Tirikātene became a leader in the internal political council and stood for parliament in the 1928 and 1931 elections, being defeated narrowly in both. In 1928 he and most of his extended family spent the election at Rātana Pā helping with the wheat harvest. At the time there were few provisions for absentee voting, and unable to even vote for himself, Tirikātene lost the election by one vote.

In June 1932, the sitting MP for Southern Maori, Tuiti Makitānara died suddenly and Eruera won the by-election to become the first Rātana MP. Tirikātene continued to represent his electorate until his death in January 1967. His initial majorities were small, only 43 in 1935.

Member of Parliament

From his maiden speech, Tirikātene made recognition of the Treaty of Waitangi one of his major aims, presenting a petition with over 30,000 signatures. The petition from the Rātana morehu was held over for thirteen years before being virtually ignored, but Tirikatane continued to raise the Treaty issue in debates.

During the depression of that time, Māori were expected to subsist from their land, and were not given equal access to unemployment payments and relief work. Proving entitlement to the old age pension was also more difficult for Māori, as Māori did not have to register births until 1919. Tirikātene spoke out against this discrimination in social welfare which caused poverty to Māori and the removal of this inequality by the Labour Government strengthened the Labour and Rātana bond.

Following the Rātana-Labour alliance, Tirikātene became the First President of the Labour Party Māori Advisory Council, a committee to set Māori policy for the party. During the Second World War, Tirikātene set up and led the Māori War Effort Organisation. The experience of Māori running their own affairs led him to introduce the Māori Social and Economic Advancement Act of 1945, but it did not give the independence for iwi he had hoped for.

Sir Eruera, Minister of Forests, with Lady Tirikātene, in October 1960, shortly after he was knighted. He is wearing the insignia of the Knight Commander of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George.

Between 1946 and 1949, Tirikātene was involved in land claim settlements for Waikato—Maniapoto and Taranaki. He persuaded the Ngāi Tahu to accept the Ngaitahu Claim Settlement Act of 1944 and became president of the Ngaitahu Trust Board.

After a period in opposition, he was appointed Minister of Forests, and Minister in charge of Printing and Stationery. Tirikātene was expecting Māori Affairs, which was taken by Prime Minister Walter Nash. The two often clashed, with Tirikātene wanting greater autonomy for Māori. One achievement of this period was the official recognition of Waitangi Day through the Waitangi Day Act 1960, commemorating the signing of Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

Tirikātene continued committee work while in opposition after 1960, and remained an MP until his death. He was succeeded in the seat by his daughter, Whetu Tirikatene-Sullivan.

Recognition

In 1935, Tirikātene was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal. In 1953, he was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal. He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 1960 Queen's Birthday Honours. Within the Rātana movement, he was known as Te Omeka.

References

References

  1. Ballara, Angela. (1998). "Tirikātene, Eruera Tīhema Te Āika".
  2. Atkinson, Neill (2003), ''Adventures in Democracy: A History of the Vote in New Zealand'', University of Otago Press, pp. 135–6.
  3. (6 May 1935). "Official jubilee medals". [[The Evening Post (New Zealand).
  4. (3 July 1953). "Coronation Medal". Supplement to the New Zealand Gazette.
  5. {{London Gazette. (11 June 1960)
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