Te Aliki Kaveia, beloved Chief of Taumako, died at home on 27 August, 2009.
Weeping and wailing was heard throughout the thousand mile long Solomon
Islands and beyond to the furthest island groups in the Pacific - wherever
people who knew his kind ways and astonishing accomplishments. Those who knew
him called him "Te Matua" – The Parent or Ancestor.
Te Matua is well remembered by people who met him during his three visits to
Kaua'I - from the Fijian pilots who urged him to take the controls of the 747
that flew him to Hawaii (he did steer it through soaring turns), to Dr Larry
Sherrer, his associates and staff, and Wilcox Hospital, who donated services
to give him back his sight (his eyesight was better than everyone else from
then on), to the hundreds of school children, volunteers, and cultural
practitioners who came to watch him and his Taumako crew make the main hull of
a voyaging canoe as a gift to the people of Kaua'i.
As a boy Te Matua survived a 1918 epidemic that killed all but 37 of over 2000
people who lived on Taumako. The British colonizers were coming, so Te Matua's
father sent him to his Aunt in the Outer Reef Islands where he became a
bailout boy on voyaging canoes…then a precocious teenage steersman … then the
captain of many far ranging voyages throughout his region. As a man he raised
16 children (15 of them adopted), and worked as Paramount Chief of Taumako for
over 40 years. In 1996 he started the Vaka Taumako Project. His vision was
that the wisdom of the ancients is every bit as important now as it was
thousands of years ago. Te Matua stood as a link between the past and the future
Te Matua was born about 98 years ago in Kahula kainga, on the windward side of
Taumako Island. Kahula was also the birthplace of Te Matua's super-hero
ancestor, Lata (known as Laka in Hawaii). According to pan- Polynesian legend
Lata was the first person to build and sail a voyaging canoe. Lata was the
personage who Te Matua himself referred to as "Te Matua." It was the knowledge
and wisdom of Lata that Te Matua dedicated his life to learning, using, and
sharing with a new generation. He aimed to help his own people and all of
humanity at the same time. He knew that the ancient knowledge was valuable to everyone.
Te Matua's gifts to his students included authentic Polynesian knowledge that
was thought by many to have died with Reef Islands navigator Basil Tevake in
1971 (We, the Navigators, U. of HI Press:1972). Thanks to the enthusiasm of
Taumako children, the assistance from Kaua'i community members, and the
efforts of dozens of sailors and admirers around the world, Te Matua spent the
last fifteen years of his life doing his best to convey what he knew to a new
generation in the form of the Vaka Taumako Project (www.vaka.org). He taught
how to build, sail, and navigate completely traditional (stone-age) voyaging
canoes using ancient methods that have never been documented or used in modern
times (various Polynesian voyaging revival projects notwithstanding!). In the
process of doing this he demonstrated ancient spiritual and social skills that
are required for any who would venture over the deep blue sea to visit people
on other islands, make friends, renew relationships, or explore where
ancestors once roamed.
In the next issue of Pacific Journal the article "Te Matua's Gift" will offer
stories of the life of Te Matua … remembrances of his humor, wisdom, and never
before revealed details of the Polynesian navigation system.