Conservationist Nganeko Minhinnick of Ngati Te Ata Waiohua today becomes a Dame. Photo / Dean Purcell
Conservationist Nganeko Minhinnick of Ngati Te Ata Waiohua today becomes a Dame. Photo / Dean Purcell
Dame Nganeko Minhinnick: Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Maori and conservation.
Sitting in the sunshine at Tahuna Marae, which borders the Manukau Harbour, Dame Nganeko Minhinnick touches the moko kauwae on her chin.
It is a mark of a fight to protect Matukutureia, a maunga in the volcanic field, and a pa site which was quarried extensively. Until 2010, it wascrowned with a water tank for Papatoetoe.
Dame Nganeko, 73, had the ink marked into her skin in her 50s. It was a message to her elders that it was a fight which she believed she'd lost.
"I just wanted to let the waahi ngaro [place of those who'd passed on] know that we'd tried."
Dame Nganeko is an environmental champion, having taken a claim about the spoiling of the Manukau Harbour and land loss to the Waitangi Tribunal on behalf of all Waikato-Tainui hapu. It set a benchmark for protecting the natural resources of the harbour.
The Waiuku grandmother and staunch kingitanga follower had a hand in the Resource Management Act - although it's not fully reflective of the values she wanted it to capture.
She has protested, been arrested, occupied land and kept on at regional and local councils to protect the interests of her tribe, Ngati Te Ata Waiohua. That work continues.
She has criticised New Zealand at the United Nations for its record on indigenous issues.