Mr Tipene said he had been with Mr Henare only hours earlier when they attended new MP Ria Bond's maiden speech in Parliament on Wednesday evening. The NZ First MP entered Parliament after Winston Peters' victory in the recent Northland byelection. Although Ms Bond previously lived in Invercargill, she is of Ngati Hine descent. It was a shock to learn Mr Henare had died later that night, Mr Tipene said.
"He has left a huge hole in Ngati Hine, Ngapuhi and the nation, because everyone respected him so much. All we can do is try to carry on his legacy and vision, and that of his Ngati Hine forebears."
Another Ngati Hine leader, Waihoroi Shortland, said the greatest loss was what Mr Henare had yet to do.
"As much as Erima has done, on the national stage and the home front, I believe we were still to see what he could achieve, and that is the real loss for Ngati Hine. Leadership of his ilk is hard to replace. There were still many things he had to accomplish, and that potential has been snuffed out when it ought to have bloomed."
That potential included Mr Henare's ability to make peace and bring factions together, Mr Shortland said.
Mr Henare was one of the key expert witnesses in the Waitangi Tribunal's ongoing Northland inquiry, a member of the Waitangi National Trust Board, Maori cultural adviser to Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga, and executive director of Maori at the Open Polytechnic of New Zealand. His many other roles included membership of Creative New Zealand, Northland District Health Board and the NorthTec Council. He served as chairman of Te Tai Tokerau PHO and chief executive of the Ngati Hine Health Trust.
Mr Henare is survived by his wife, children and grandchildren. One of his sons, Peeni Henare, was elected Labour MP for Tamaki Makaurau in 2014.