Te Unua Museum of Southland director says work is underway on how to tell region's stories
Photo:
Supplied/Ngāi Tahu
The director of Te Unua Museum of Southland says work has begun on how to tell the region's important stories ahead of its expected opening late next year.
Invercargill City Council and Waihōpai Rūnaka are working in partnership on the contents of the new museum.
Director Eloise Wallace told RNZ it was about more than just constructing a building.
"When it comes to museums people like to find themselves, but they also like to find something new. And we really are trying to push the boundaries for our new museum in terms of how we tell those stories so its very exciting, challenging space."
The name, Te Unua, meant a double-hulled waka, and it was important the council worked in partnership with mana whenua, she said.
Indeed, Mana whenua stories will make up an important part of the museum.
Invercargill City Council and Waihōpai Rūnaka said they were both committed to making sure indigenous and local stories were told well.
Rūnaka kaiwhakahaere Cyril Gilroy said museums had often misrepresented Māori historically and told personal stories without the involvement of mana whenua.
"It's important for people to understand it's just not Ngāi Tahu ... it's the history of our kōrero towards the people and towards the land and the mountains and the streams. All those things."
A series of wananga - discussions - would be held to decide what would go into the museum.
The historical movements of indigenous people made up a big part of the story of Murihiku, Gilroy said.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
Emergency services responding to helicopter crash in Bay of Plenty
Photo: 123RF Emergency services are at the scene of a helicopter incident in Bay of Plenty. St John said it was notified of an aviation incident in Matatā at about 3.15pm Sunday. Two ambulances, two rapid response units, two helicopters and one manager attended the scene, although St John was yet to confirm the status of the patients. St John crews remain on scene, with one fire service appliance assisting. Fire and Emergency said nobody was trapped during the incident. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
More than 15k Māori and Moriori cultural heritage items may be in overseas museums and universities
By Māpuna Photo: All rights Reserved The Kaihautū of Te Papa says there could be well over 15,000 pieces of Māori and Moriori cultural heritage in overseas museums and universities. Arapata Hakiwai, who's been at Te Papa Tongarewa, Museum of New Zealand in Te Whanganui-a-Tara, Wellington since it opened in 1998, told Māpuna his work with the museum began with an order from academic Sir Hirini Moko Mead. "He actually said 'Arapata you should go teaching' so I went teaching at Wellington High and he said 'you must go and work for the national museum'. It was very new to me but I found very quickly within the first year or so I was thrown well and truly into the deep end." Hakiwai said he soon realised the museum was outdated and needed to change. "Māori and Moriori ancestors, hundreds, thousands of them were taken, traded, swapped, exchanged, sold to other museums and knowing that our museum was implicitly involved in that at the highest levels." He went on to do research on the number of pieces of Māori and Moriori cultural heritage held in overseas museums and universities. "It's well over the 15, 16 thousand... and this is just a conservative figure because these figures now would be absolutely updated, there's well over 33 museums in the United States, well over 30 museums in the UK that hold Māori taonga and many of them hold large numbers. The Field Museum hold probably one of the largest, over two and a half thousand Māori taonga." The reality is a large percentage of indigenous cultural heritage is held offshore and a large percentage of that comes from an early period and that heritage should be connected back to Māori and Moriori people, Hakiwai said. "The sad reality is over 95 percent wouldn't know off that, wouldn't be aware of the extent of that or where their taonga are, or who have them." This information should be available to Māori and Moriori as matter of right not privilege, he said. Sir Hirini would often say that there are many unique taonga held overseas that we don't have equivalent to back in New Zealand, Hakiwai said. Such as Te Rā in the British Museum The Karanga Aotearoa repatriation programme began in 2003 with a sole focus on tīpuna koiwi or human remains. Hakiwai said many museums throughout the world have agreed to return the tīpuna, a huge change from when the programme started. Many museums in the international community of museums are realising the old practice of 'amassing treasures' can't continue, he said, but there are still museums who keep acquiring. The 1984 Te Māori exhibition has had a huge impact and legacy for the relationships between Māori and overseas museums, he said. "If you take Chicago at the Field Museum, the Field Museum was the last venue of Te Māori and what followed from Te Māori was the restoration of Ruatepupuke, what followed from Te Māori was you had a delegation of staff who traveled over to Tokomaru Bay to say that 'we would like to do something with respect to Ruatepupuke.'" The 19th century wharenui Ruatepupuke originally built in 1881 in Tokomaru Bay now at the Field Museum in Chicago by way of Frankfurt in Germany offers a unique example in to how museums can build partnerships with indigenous people. Maori Meeting House, Ruatepupuke II - Field Museum of Natural History Chicago Photo: Joyofmuseums Hakiwai was involved in the restoration of the wharenui in the 1990s after elders from Tokomaru visited him in Wellington. "They said 'our tīpuna whare is over there but it's unclothed, we need to re-clothe it, it's lonely, it's naked and we want to rectify that'." Initially he believed the project would culminate with the whare's repatriation, but his elders told him "Arapata kia tau te mauri, settle down." They wanted to work with the Field Museum to "reclothe" the whare tūpuna, and it remains in Chicago to this day one of the very few wharenui outside Aotearoa. Hakiwai said he believes museums can have a higher purpose in society by helping to support and uplift the foundations of culture and identity. Even if that means it is time for some of taonga within the collections of Te Papa to return home. "If that is the desire of iwi, hapū and whānau for their taonga to be returned and homed we will work with them to achieve those ends... Having taonga back in their community, in their whenua amongst their people, elevating the histories and their mana and significance surely that's something far greater than taonga sitting on a shelf," he said. It's part of reconciling what can a museum be rather than blindly following what museums are now, he said.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Firefighters extinguish fire at Auckland's Westgate Mitre 10, search for hot spots
Smoke could be seen from one of the roller doors at Westgate Mitre 10. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ A fire at a Mitre 10 hardware store in West Auckland is now out. The fire at Mitre 10 Mega Westgate near Whenuapai was reported at 6.40pm on Saturday to Fire and Emergency. A spokesperson said eight fire trucks were still at the scene shortly before 9pm, ventilating the building and monitoring for hot spots. Firefighters outside Mitre 10. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ In total 17 fire trucks were sent, including three ladder units, a spokesperson said earlier. The building, which was 200 metres long and 80m wide was described as heavily smoke logged. Fire crews were sent from West Harbour, Kumeū, Te Atatū, Auckland City, Henderson, Parnell, Avondale, Greenhithe, Ellerslie. Firefighters inspecting where the smoke came from. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ An on-duty pharmacist close by said he heard the sirens and fire trucks after 7pm but couldn't see any flames. The pharmacist said he could see an aerial appliance had its ladder in the air but he couldn't see any water going onto the building. An RNZ video journalist at the scene said the fire looked well contained after 8pm with no major visible smoke or flames. It was extinguished before 9pm. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ They said a lot of trucks and personnel were coming and going out of an entry to the timber yard. "A small amount of smoke is visible coming out of one of the roller doors near a loading dock." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.