8-617: Te Tapuwae is a Māori cemetery at Otenuku Marae in Ruatoki , in the Bay of Plenty Region of New Zealand . Ngāi Tūhoe tribal leader Takurua Tamarau was buried on marae land in 1958, and subsequently that part of the land became a cemetery for the Ngāti Koura hapu of Tūhoe. Tribal leaders of the Ngāi Tūhoe iwi are traditionally buried there. In Maori folklore the cemetery is said to be protected by
16-407: A district high school from 1946–47 until the secondary section closed in the 1970s. In 1978 it became New Zealand's first bilingual primary school. It then became a Māori language immersion school for children up to standard two, remaining bilingual for standards three and four. On 1 September 1992 it became an area school for children up to form seven and the first official kura kaupapa school. It
24-562: A powerful tapu which will curse anyone entering the cemetery without permission of the marae kaumātua . On leaving the sacred cemetery, visitors must always wash their hands with cleansing water. Tuhoe refer to the buried ground as "Te Tapuwae, Te Urupa ō Ngā Rangatira ō Ngāi Tūhoe” ("Te Tapuwae is the elder of the kings of the Tuhoe people") 38°8′59.85″S 177°0′25.44″E / 38.1499583°S 177.0070667°E / -38.1499583; 177.0070667 Ruatoki Ruatoki North
32-476: Is a town in the eastern Bay of Plenty of New Zealand , just south of the small town of Tāneatua and approximately 20 km south of the city of Whakatāne . The Whakatāne River runs northwards through the Ruatoki Valley and has formed broad alluvial flats. The main settlement of Ruatoki North is on the eastern side of the river. The population of approximately 600 people are predominantly Māori of
40-460: Is now Te Wharekura o Ruatoki , a co-educational state area school that teaches Year 1 to 13 students in the Māori language. It has a roll of 226 as of August 2024. Children from west of the river attended Ruatoki Native School in the early decades. As there was no bridge, they waded the river, and missed school when the river was in flood. Consequently, Tawera Native School opened on the western side of
48-512: The Tūhoe iwi. The main economic activities in the Ruatoki Valley are dairy farming and cropping. Tūhoe people started dairy farming at Ruatoki from at least the 1890s. The first school – Ruatoki Native School – and the first post office opened at the same site on the eastern side of the Whakatāne River in 1896. In 1908 two telegraph offices opened, one at the school and known as Ruatoki , and
56-597: The Government committed $ 263,775 from the Provincial Growth Fund to upgrade Ngāhina Marae, creating 12 jobs. It also contributed $ 622,833 to Ōtenuku, Paneteure and two other marae; $ 477,707 to Tauarau marae; and $ 1,646,820 to Waikirikiri and 5 other marae. Local Tuhoe leaders requested a school in 1891 and the Ruatoki Native School opened on the eastern side of the Whakatāne River on 4 June 1896. It became
64-595: The other a little to the north at the store in the township and known as Ruatoki North . A cheese factory opened in the township in 1908. The factory burned down in the late 1920s and a new concrete factory replaced it in 1928. The factory closed in 1964 and has since been demolished. Ruatoki was one of the main sites involved in the 2007 New Zealand police raids , conducted under the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002 . There are ten marae , which are meeting places for local Tūhoe hapū . In October 2020,
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