A delegation is headed to London for the latest step in efforts to have significant Māori carvings, that have been there since the 19th century, returned in exchange for new ones.
Te Hono o Hinemihi, a delegation of 48 Hinemihi descendants, are to travel to Surrey, London for for the discussions, with optimism growing that their return is in sight.
The Hinemihi meeting house was carved for Aporo Te Wharekaniwha, a leader of the hapū Ngāti Hinemihi, and was used by people in Rotorua to take shelter from the 1886 Tarawera eruption. It was later sold to William Hillier Onslow, who took it back to his family estate in Surrey, where it has stood since the 1890s.
Since the 1950s the National Trust have been the guardians of the carvings and the Clandon Park property where it stands. But discussions about the return also included Te Pouhere Tāonga, Nga Kohinga Whakairo o Hinemihi and Te Maru o Hinemihi.
Hinemihi delegation representative Heeni Brown said the artefacts were a vital part of New Zealand history and they held massive significance.
"When it comes to Himemihi, the carvers of that era are some of the last who used traditional practices, so not just building it how you would a house," she said.
Although the original carvings would eventually be taken back to Aotearoa, the exchange for new carvings on the Clandon Estate site meant those in the UK who whakapapa back to New Zealand would still have an important cultural space there.
Brown said they wanted to ensure expatriate New Zealanders felt connected to Aotearoa, and the new carvings would provide for that.
After England, the delegation will continue on to Hamburg, Germany, to host a display of live workshops, demonstrations and haka performances by Te Kapa Haka o Tarāwha.