Te Pua
Ko te kōrero kei muri i te ingoa
Ko Te Pua te ingoa taketake o te pito whakatetonga o Wai-māhia e pātata ana ki te papa rēhia nei.
Ko Te Pua o te Karaka te roanga ake o te ingoa Te Pua – he mea taunaha ki te ingoa o tētahi kahurangi nō te iwi o Waiohua.
I whānau mai te kahurangi i raro i te karaka, i te tahatika whakatetonga o Wai-māhia.
I te kohikohi mātaitai tōna whaea nōna e whakamamae ana, me te aha ka whānau mai tana pēpi i raro i te karaka i te wā e puāwai ana ngā pua.
Whānau mai ana he pēpi, ko te tikanga a te Māori he nehu i te whenua me te pito ki tētahi wāhi e whai hononga ana ki ngā tūpuna.
He whakahirahira, he hōhonu hoki taua tikanga ki te Māori nā te mea he wāhanga matua te whenua nō te tuakiri.
E ai ki te Māori, he mea ahu mai te tangata i te tinana o Papa-tū-ā-nuku.
Ko tērā ka ahu mai i te whenua, me hoki atu ki te whenua.
I nehua te pito me te whenua o Te Pua ki raro i te karaka, ki te wāhi tonu i whānau ai ia.
Ko te ingoa Māori o tēnei papa rēhia tētahi whakanui i taua tūāhuatanga.
Nā Te Ākitai Waiohua te kōrero nei i tuku mai.
Te Pua
The story behind the name
Te Pua, meaning ‘to bloom,’ is the traditional name given to the southern point of Wai-māhia (Weymouth) which is near this park.
Te Pua, or ‘Te Pua o te Karaka’ in full — was named after the chieftainess of the local iwi, Waiohua.
The chieftainess was born under the karaka tree, on the southern banks of Waimāhia.
Her mother was out collecting shellfish at the time, when she went into labour and gave birth to her baby under the karaka tree while it was in full bloom.
After the birth of a baby, it is customary for Māori to bury the whenua (afterbirth) and pito (umbilical cord) in a place with ancestral connections.
The ritual has deep cultural importance to Māori, for whom the land is a significant source of identity.
According to Māori, man was made from the body of Earth Mother, Papa-tu-a-nuku.
‘He taonga nō te whenua, me hoki anō ki te whenua’
What is given of the land, should return to the land.
Te Pua’s pito and whenua were buried under the karaka tree exactly where she was born. The Māori name of this park is an acknowledgement of that event.
Narrative provided by Te Ākitai Waiohua.