Birthday of Joseph Parata Hohepa Hawke (Joe Hawke)
May 4, 1940
Joe Hawke led the Bastion Point protest over land rights that took place in 1977-78.
New Zealand Herald; photograph, Robin Morrison
Joe Hawke was a leader of the occupation at Takaparawhau / Bastion Point in 1977 which led to the eventual return of Takaparawhau land where he is now buried. He worked with Dame Whina Cooper for the land march down the North Island in 1975. A decade later, the Waitangi Tribunal would find in one of its seminal rulings that Ngāti Whatua had been wronged at Takaparawhau. The land was returned, along with $3 million compensation. Hawke went on to be an iwi leader, businessman and, later, a two-term Labour list MP.
At his funeral, Hawke's brother, Alec, told the tangi: "We were landless. We had nothing to lose. And we stood by him. He drew a line in the sand and said 'no more' to those who had trampled on our rights. Not only our rights, but the rights for every Māori ope in the country.
He had one simple message: Give our land back."
At his funeral, Hawke's brother, Alec, told the tangi: "We were landless. We had nothing to lose. And we stood by him. He drew a line in the sand and said 'no more' to those who had trampled on our rights. Not only our rights, but the rights for every Māori ope in the country.
He had one simple message: Give our land back."