MAORI WAR EFFORT
DISCUSSION BY TRIBAL COMMITTEE Gisborne, June 29. Many matters affecting the organisation of the Maori war effort were discussed at a conference of Maori tribal committees convened by Sir Apirana Ngata, and held at Wairoa. ! The conference unanimously reaffirmed the policy of voluntary enlistment for military service overseas, but pointed out that the burden of maintaining the Maori Battalion had fallen most heavily on the tribes of Rotorua, Bay of Plenty and East Coast, to Wairarapa, where the needs of the farming industry and Native land development schemes were also most pressing. The conference decided to urge the authorities to relax the limit on the t number of dependents of men going overseas, to reduce the minimum age to 19, and to allow the tribal committees to determine the relative needs of the battalion and industry. Strong resentment was expressed at the disregard of the tribal committees in deciding whether men who had volunteered should be accepted for service or retained in industry, it being stated that lists of available men which had been carefully prepared by the icommittees had been pruned down as much as 75 per cent. The organisation set up to protect Maori interests, it was alleged, was being disregarded or flouted. The grave danger of young Maori women being drawn to the cities was emphasised and it was resolved that the Government be asked to investigate the conditions under which they were working and to consider the discontinuance of further recruitment and the return of the Maori women to their homes.—P.A.
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Nelson Evening Mail, Volume 78, 30 June 1943, Page 2
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258MAORI WAR EFFORT Nelson Evening Mail, Volume 78, 30 June 1943, Page 2
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