Ihakara Porutu "Kara" Puketapu (26 February 1934 – 7 July 2023) was a New Zealand public servant and Māori leader. He served as Secretary of Maori Affairs and was later chair of Te Āti Awa based in Waiwhetū, Lower Hutt.[1]
Puketapu grew up in Taranaki and rose through the ranks[6] of the Ministry of Maori Affairs (later named the Ministry of Māori Affairs and ultimately Te Puni Kōkiri) to become Secretary of Maori Affairs.[7]
Professional career
In 1973, Puketapu was appointed chief administration officer with Foreign Affairs in the New Zealand House in London, Great Britain.[4] He served in that position until 1975.[4] In 1977, he became the secretary of Māori Affairs and Māori Trustee.[4]
Puketapu also rose in standing within his iwi to become chairperson of the Te Āti Awa rūnanga (tribal council).[9] In 2011, they clashed with local authorities over the custodianship of waka.[10]
In 2008, Puketapu resigned from the Port Nicholson Block Treaty Settlement Trust chaired by Sir Ngatata Love over the compensation for Waiwhetū land confiscated by the Crown in the 1940s.[10]
Puketapu is renowned for forging a new direction for the Department to empower Māori development in response to the difficulties being faced by Māori in the urban environment.[4] Under his leadership, several Kōkiri units were established in the Wellington area. These units worked with local communities to devise programmes to support cultural and economic aspirations, thus reversing the normal "top down" approach of government departments. It was at one of these Kōkiri units in Wainuiomata that the first kōhanga reo was established. Puketapu's philosophy is outlined in his book Reform from Within.[11]
^"TE AO HOU The New World [electronic resource]". teaohou.natlib.govt.nz. 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2011. Cover Photo: Mr Whatarangi Winiata and Mr Ihakara Puketapu, both members of the Maori Young Leaders Conference. Mr Puketapu is welfare officer in Wellington; Mr Winiata, a public accountant, has gone abroad on a scholarship awarded by Rotary. (Photo: Peter Blanc.)
^ ab"Te Maori exhibition opens in New York". nzhistory.net.nz. 2011. Archived from the original on 30 December 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2011. The following year Cabinet formally approved the proposal and the formation of a Te Maori management committee, chaired by the Secretary for Maori Affairs, Kara Puketapu.
^"Balancing Commercial". firstfound.org. 2010. Retrieved 2 October 2011. Ihakara Puketapu, Chairman, Te Atiawa Runanga
^ ab"Iwi infighting stalls wharewaka plans". stuff.co.nz. 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2011. At a meeting in Waiwhetu last month, Waiwhetu Maori leader Kara Puketapu told Port Nicholson Block Treaty Settlement Trust chairman Sir Ngatata Love that no agreement existed for the waka to be moved from Te Maori Museum in Waiwhetu to the new wharewaka.
^Kara Puketapu. 1982. Reform from Within. Wellington: Department of Māori Affairs.