Te Kaewa-The Wanderers, a new book by Trevor Bentley
           
This book by
local author Trevor Bentley recounts, in vivid style, the ‘shipping out’ of
Māori adventurers across the seas and oceans of the world on Euro-American
whaleships It investigates the reputation of Māori as the most courageous and
dependable of all the indigenous Pacific seamen engaged in whaling - a
notoriously brutal and bloody exploitative industry. It discusses their diverse
work roles aboard foreign windjammers, their exploitation by avaricious
shipowners and captains, and the maritime customs, lingos, diet, dress and
superstitions they adopted.
Te Kaewa describes
how Māori seamen coped in the face of multiple dangers, privations and
separation from their whanau for months or years at a time. It details how they
responded to mistreatment by ship’s officers and crewmates, their lives ashore
in rollicking port towns like Sydney, and the diverse challenges overcome
by those who managed to return home.
                     
                                                                                     Te Anaru
                                Robley, H; Moko
or Maori Tattooing, Chambers and Hall, London,1896: 37.
The book also
references Anaru, (likely Te Anaru -The Brave), a Tauranga adventurer, who
worked aboard whaling ships and was based in Sydney. There, he met and married
a European wife (unidentified by name), before they sailed for New Zealand. The
couple lived with Te Anaru’s hapū at a pā in Tauranga. The British Army officer
and renowned artist Horatio Robley sketched Te Anaru at Tauranga circa. 1864
but, unfortunately for local posterity, not his Pākehā wife.
Bentley, Trevor, Te Kaewa - The Wanderers: Māori
Sailors on Euro-American Whalers, 1790s-1890s. Kererū Press, Tauranga, 2025.
 
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