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where the Treaty had been signed, and spoke also of the great importance of the Treaty, and the spirit of the Treaty, saying that it was ‘the very core about which our life together on these islands has been and must always be shaped … ‘It is fitting that each year men and women should gather here to do honour to those whose agreement 123 years ago laid the foundations of our national life. ‘It is all the more appropriate that we do so here tonight on the eleventh anniversary of the accession of our beloved Queen to whom, in the spirit of the Treaty of Waitangi and as one people, we offer our respect, our loyalty and our devotion.’ The loudest cheers of the day greeted the Queen, when, in her reply, she made specific reference to the subject. ‘Today, before you all, I want to renew those pledges and to assure my Maori people that the obligations entered into at Waitangi go far deeper than any legal provision in any formal document. ‘Whatever may have happened in the past and whatever the future may bring, it remains the sacred duty of the Crown today, as in 1840, to stand by the spirit of the Treaty of Waitangi, and to ensure that the trust of the Maori people is never betrayed.’ The Queen said she would do her part. ‘But remember,’ she added, ‘that these pledges are given on behalf of the self-governing people of New Zealand, and her democratically elected Government. Therefore each one of you bears some responsibility to maintain the provisions and foster the spirit of the treaty.

The action song and haka groups gave really magnificent performances as they added the kinaki, the complement, to the ceremonial speeches. It was an evening that will do much to increase the fame and mana of Maori dances and music, both here and overseas. Prince Philip was so impressed by the standard of the Maori singing at Waitangi, and later at Napier, when the royal visitors were greeted by the poi and action songs of the girls of St Joseph's Maori Girls' College, that he suggested that thought might be given to sending a Maori group to compete in the great festival of song, the ‘Eisteddfod’, in Wales. The Queen and the Duke wave farewell as the royal barge takes them back to the ‘Britannia’ at the end of this most memorable day.

Some of the people who came to pay their respects at the funeral of Mr ‘Dobbie’ Paikea. Above the Leader of the Opposition, the Rt Hon. Walter Nash, Mrs Iriaka Ratana, M.P., Sir Eruera Tirikatene, M.P., and the Postmaster-General, Mr Kinsella, who represented the Prime Minister.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/TAH196303.2.14

Bibliographic details

Te Ao Hou, March 1963, Page 28

Word Count
450

Untitled Te Ao Hou, March 1963, Page 28

Untitled Te Ao Hou, March 1963, Page 28