Whina Cooper


Dame Whina Cooper was a respected kuia, who worked for many years for the rights of her people, and particularly to improve the lot of Māori women. Her wide influence and nationally recognised activity led her to be acknowledged with awards in both the British and New Zealand Royal Honours Systems, and by her own people, who bestowed the title Te Whaea o te Motu upon her.

Early life

Dame Whina Cooper was born Hōhepine Te Wake, daughter of Catholic catechist Heremia Te Wake and Kare Pauro Kawatihi, of the Te Rarawa iwi, at Te Karaka, Hokianga.
From an early age she showed an interest in her father’s role, and in history and genealogy. Her education began at Whakarapa Native School. In 1907 she attended St Joseph’s Maori Girls’ College. After high school she returned to Whakarapa where her father wanted her to enter into an arranged marriage with Tureiti Te Heuheu Tukino V, leader of Ngati Tuwharetoa. Cooper refused and instead worked at a local co-operative store. She worked as a teacher for a brief time, at Pawarenga Native School. However, as one of only three teachers she became frustrated and found her time stretched between teaching and helping her own community. She left teaching in 1914.
Cooper's first involvement in politics was in the form of a land dispute over an area of leased mudflats. The farmer, Bob Holland, who rented the land, wanted to drain the estuary for farming. That would have obstructed current use of the land by local iwi for gathering seafood and racing horses during the drier months. Heremia challenged the lease in court and Cooper led a group of protestors to fill in Holland's drains. The protestors were eventually charged with trespassing but they had stalled events long enough for Heremia to be successful and the lease was withdrawn by the Marine Department. She played a leading role in community activities, impressing politician Sir Āpirana Ngata who invited her to a national hui in 1932. She worked alongside him to promote Māori land development programmes in the Hokianga.

National political activity

She moved to Auckland in 1949 when her second husband, William Cooper, died. Her political activity changed from local to national. In September 1951 she was elected first president of the new Māori Women's Welfare League "which was able to improve things notably for Maori women", working on health, housing, education, and welfare. In 1957 she stepped down as president and the annual conference rewarded her with the title Te Whaea o te Motu. During the 1960s she worked on a local level around Auckland, but kept largely out of the national spotlight. This changed in 1975 when a coalition of Māori groups asked her to lead them in a protest against the loss of Māori land. She agreed, proposing a hikoi from the northern tip of the North Island to Parliament in Wellington at the other end of the island.
During September and October 1975, the nearly 80-year-old Cooper again became nationally recognised, walking at the head of the Māori land march from Te Hapua to Wellington. The slogan of the march was "not one more acre of Maori land"; they demanded acknowledgement of property rights under the Treaty of Waitangi.
In the 1953 Coronation Honours, Cooper was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the Māori people. In the 1974 Queen's Birthday Honours she was promoted to Commander of the Order of the British Empire for services to Māori welfare and culture. In the 1981 New Year Honours, Cooper was further promoted to Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the Māori people, and on 6 February 1991, she became the twentieth appointee to the Order of New Zealand, New Zealand's highest civil honour. In 1990, Cooper received the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal, and in 1993 she was awarded the New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal.

Death

Cooper returned to Panguru in the Hokianga in 1983 and died there, aged 98, in 1994.