Te Tāruke-ā-Tawhiri takes a deeply cultural narrative that is embedded in this place – Tāmaki Makaurau.
The narrative speaks to the struggles of Tāwhiri-mātea Son of Rangi-nui and Papa-tū-ā-nuku. He is the actuality of winds, clouds, rain, hail, snow and storms., the primal ancestor associated with weather. Tied to the Māori creation narratives of the universe and the world, Tāwhiri-mātea is seen to be influencing our climate and accelerating the change in our climate in response to human induced climate change.
The narrative calls for a change in our response to climate change, re-framing, re-imagining and re-setting the current system, and a shift from a human-centred approach to an ecological-centred approach given our symbiotic relationships with the natural environment.