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THE OTIRIA MEETING HOUSES by Tawai Kawiti Situated close by the railway station at Otiria Junction, on the North Auckland railway line, is the Otiria Marae. Here, for some years now work has been going on steadily in the building of meeting-houses for the Ngatihine Tribe of the Bay of Islands. All is done by voluntary Maori labour, from the felling of logs, and the cutting at the saw-mill on the site, to the erection of buildings—all is managed and carried out by Maori tradesmen. For the initial planning of this undertaking we owe much to the late Mr William Cooper of the Maori Affairs Department, Auckland, who had been Consolidation Officer for the district from 1935 to the time of his death, in 1950. Pita Kiingi, leader of the Ngatiteara tribe, made a gift of the marae to the people, and also began to work timber from the bush with his team of bullocks, but his ill-health and subsequent death left this work hardly started. The Keretene brothers, both closely related to the Kiingi family, took up the work, and it can be said that the work really started then. It was a tremendous undertaking for those unused to such work, and there were many difficulties to be met and overcome, one being This home-made mill supplies the timber for Otiria's community buildings. the shortage of roofing iron during the war years. But Wiremu Keretene, who is a minister of religion, and Paki, a dairy farmer, just carried on, and today the dining-hall is completed —one of the finest of its kind in the land. The planning and construction of this and the carved meeting-house is in the hands of Whare Hauraki, of Motatau, who has been a carpenter all his life. The people have been very fortunate to have his services. Work of this nature and importance requires the best experience. In this respect, there could not have been a better choice. Whare Hauraki has built several meeting-houses in the district. One of the more important ones, built some years ago for the Mormon Church at Pipiwai, is the Paraima Hall. The carving operations now in progress are in the hands of Miha, from the Bay of Plenty district. A pupil of the old Maori school of carving, Miha does all his casting from memory. Younger generations of carvers are being taught to transfer designs and figures from paper, but, like the artist of old, Miha's only book is his memory. In true Maori spirit, he has come all this way to do this very important and valuable work for no remuneration except the honour of doing it. This system—we call it “taha Maori”—calls for sacrifice in material and work from those who have made it their self-appointed task to carry out. One is reminded of the words of Mr Churchill during the battle of Britain, when he said something to the effect that “never have so many owed so much

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