Jock McEwen,
administrator, historian, linguist, composer and master carver, was a
well-known figure in the Māori world and the wider Pacific for over half a
century.
Born in
Cheltenham near Fielding in 1915 he was brought up with a strong Presbyterian
work ethic, which he retained until his death in 2010. Jock came into early
contact with the Māori community at Aorangi, where he learned to speak fluent
te reo and developed interests in whakapapa (including his own) and tikanga
Māori. With initial help from a relative, he developed his interest in Māori
carving and its many regional variations.
In the mid
1930s Jock commenced his public service career in the Native Department, which
became Māori Affairs. He came into contact with Sir Apirana Ngata with whom he
later visited Māori communities throughout New Zealand. Jock was a founder
member of both Ngāti Pōneke Young Māori Club and later Māwai Hakona Māori
Association. In 1953 he was appointed Resident Commissioner for Niue Island,
followed later by appointments to head the Island Territories and Maori Affairs
Departments.
During this
time Jock travelled widely throughout the Pacific. He visited the United
Nations several times on decolonisation matters affecting New Zealand’s Pacific
territories, spoke at UN conferences in Brazil and Cameroon, and chaired a UN
visiting mission to Papua New Guinea.
In retirement
Jock gave 35 years of voluntary service to the community including helping to
establish Ōrongomai Marae in Upper Hutt. He taught Māori carving to Māori trade
trainees, inmates of Rimutaka prison and others, producing many of the carvings
that adorn meeting houses including those at Pipitea and Ōrongomai maraes as
well as other buildings.
RRP: $49.99 |
ISBN: 9780473360337 - Reviresco Trust
About the author:
Her first
book, Charles Fleming – Environmental Patriot, a biography of her father, was
published in 2005 and was a finalist in the 2006 Montana Book Awards. Mary then
edited and published the diary Charles Fleming had kept during his year as a
coast watcher in World War II on the subantarctic Auckland Islands.
Between 2005 and 2010, Mary was involved in caring for her
husband’s parents in their final years. Following Jock McEwen’s death and tangi
at Ōrongomai Marae, Mary decided to write a biography of this very unusual, but
remarkable, Pākehā.
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