Kirsten Wong from the association said there was "genuine dismay felt across the NZ Chinese early settler community for the lack of respect being shown towards their ancestral remains and the disregard for the communities - Chinese and Maori - whose story it is".
The Chinese community would prefer it left untouched and treated as a graveyard.
Race Relations Commissioner Dame Susan Devoy supported the call, saying "this is much more than a mere shipwreck" and slammed those she said were trying to turn it into a money-making venture and tourist attraction.
"The voices of Chinese New Zealanders, many of whom are descended from men whose remains are still with the wreck of the SS Ventnor, are missing amid very public plans to turn their final resting place into a tourism venture," she said.
The story of the Ventnor and what happened to some of the remains which washed up on shore was "a touchstone of race relations, dignity and mana", she said. Bodies which washed inland were recovered by local Te Roroa and Te Rarawa Maori who buried them in their ancestral burial grounds and cared for their graves.
Dame Susan said the Pike River mine should never be turned into a tourist attraction and neither should the SS Ventnor. NZME.