IWI / HAPU AFFILIATIONS
Hakopa Te Ata o Tu was a descendant of Tahu Potiki, founder of
the Ngāi Tahu people of the South Island and son of rangatira Te Momo Kakahu. He was born
at Kaiapoi Pa,1 south of
Christchurch. According to evidence given by Hakopa in 1869 at a
court hearing protesting the alienation of tribal land, he stated
he had four children. 'Two go to school. After this I won't send my
children to school, because the land will be taken from the
children'.2
Held in high regard as a warrior, Hakopa was captured by Te
Rauparaha after a hand-to-hand combat in which Ngāti Toa chief Te
Peehi Tahau, was killed. The incident that caused the dispute was
an argument over a block of
pounamu, of which Ngāi Tahu Poutini are considered kaitiaki. To
avenge the death of Te Peehi, Te Rauparaha mounted an attack
against Ngāi Tahu, and both Hakopa Te Ata o Tu and his wife Te Ao
Paki were captured. They were transported to Waikanae north of
Wellington to become slaves to Te Rauparaha. Hakopa was later
liberated when his captors embraced Christianity, and he returned
to his homelands in Canterbury.
Hakopa was considered to be an expert on working pounamu
(greenstone) as given by this 1881 account by Rev. James W. Stack,
when Hakopa was reputed to be 83 years old:
I have just received from an old Māori chief, Hakopa te Ata o
Tu, at Kaiapoi, the following replies to a translation of the
questions forwarded to me by Dr. von Haast. I attach great value to
them, as the writer is a very intelligent man, who occupied a
leading position in the Māori community here at the time of
Rauparaha's invasion. James W. Stack.3
Hakopa's responses to Rev. Stack reveal that he did not observe
heitiki being made
during his childhood. Rather, they were made in the North Island.
Only natural materials were used to shape pounamu. Māori did not
worship heitiki; they were considered mementoes of deceased
persons. Some of the names Hakopa gave for pounamu
include:
(a) Hauhunga [hauhunga = frost, cool]
(b) kawakawa
(c) inanga
(d) kahurangi
(e) tangiwai
(f) matakirikiri - greenstone pebbles
(g) aotea - a counterfeit greenstone, opaque; often mistaken when
in the river-beds by the unskilful.4
Hakopa is remembered as a skilled pounamu carver and he died at
his birthplace Kaiapoi Pa in 1883. In 1980, New Zealand Post
produced a set of stamps honouring key Māori identities from
history. They include Hakopa Te Ata-o-Tu, Sir Apirana Ngata,
Princess Te Puea, Kamariera Te Hau Takiri
Wharepapa and Tukino Te Heuheu.
NM
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