Saturday, April 11, 2026
Home Blog Page 726

Mailefihi Siu’ilikutapu head tutor dies after being injured in Gisborne fatal crash

The head tutor for female students at Mailefihi Siu’ilikutapu college in Vava’u has died in New Zealand today January 1, 2016.

Leotisia Malakai, 55, was seriously injured after a bus she was travelling on with 52 others  plunged down an embankment on December 24, 2016.

The fatal crash now has claimed three lives including student Sione Taumālolo, 11, and wife and mother Talita Moimoi Fifita, 33.

The bodies of Taumalolo and Fifita had been flown back home to Tonga on Saturday morning.

Malakai’s body is understood to be at the Waikato hospital in Hamilton.

A spokesperson for the group at Ponsonby has confirmed the sad news this afternoon.

The passengers were all members of a brass band group which arrived in Auckland  from Vava’u, Tonga, to fundraise for the college’s 70th anniversary next year.

Condolences started pouring in on social media for Malakai.

Her cousin Tufui Fonua Kama wrote: “Fly High Aunty Leotisia Malakai??????God have called you to be one of his guardian angels”.

Gisborne bus wreckage retrieved as survivors prepare to play memorial concert tonight

ACC will provide funeral grant for Gisborne bus crash victims

A wedding, an Olympic medal and now a Dame – could her year have been any better?

Olympic gold medallist Valerie Adams began 2016 with a wedding, won silver in the shotput at the Olympic Games in Rio and has ended the year  being made a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the New Year’s Honours List.

Adams told Radio New Zealand she hoped she would inspire more women.

“It’s amazing, not only to be a woman, but also to be a Pacific Island woman,” she told the national broadcaster.

The Olympian  was made a Dame for services to athletics.

Her title is the female equivalent of a knighthood.

Adams, 32, was named New Zealand’s first Sports Ambassador to the Pacific in October this year.

She recently returned from Samoa where she had been promoting the country’s Nobesity programme to young people.

As Kaniva News reported last year, Adams has also been honoured in Tonga.

In January 2015 the title Tongitupe-ʻO e-Funga Taua was bestowed on her by Lord Vaea in her mother’s home village of Houma.

The appointment is the highest honour given to commoners in Tongan culture.

Adams won the World Youth Championships in 2001 with a throw of 16.81 metres when she was just 16.

She then became World Junior Champion the following year with a throw of 17.73 metres.

She was the first woman to win four consecutive individual titles at the World Track and Field Championships, achieving gold in 2007, 2009, 2011 and 2013.

She has won two Olympic gold medals, three Commonwealth Games gold medals and three World Indoor Championship golds.

Adams is one of only nine athletes to win world championships at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletic event.

She has also won a bronze and four silver medals in international competition.

She holds the New Zealand, Oceanian, Commonwealth and equal World record for a personal best throw of 21.24 metres, which she set in August 2011.

Adams has won 14 New Zealand national women’s shot put titles.

She has received the Halberg Supreme Award, New Zealand’s highest annual sporting honour three times and was named Halberg Sportswoman of the Year for seven consecutive years.

Adams was named on Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2009 New Year’s Honour List.

She was born in Rotorua to a Tongan mother, Liklika Ngauamo, who came from Houma on Tongatapu. She has 18 brothers and sisters.

Her brother Steven Adams earns a multi-million dollar salary with the American basketball team Oklahoma City Thunder.

The main points

  • Olympic gold medallist Valerie Adams began 2016 with a wedding, won silver in the shotput at the Olympic Games in Rio and has ended the year being made a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the New Year’s Honours List.
  • Adams told Radio New Zealand she hoped she would inspire more women.
  • “It’s amazing, not only to be a woman, but also to be a Pacific Island woman,” she told the national broadcaster.
  • The Olympian was made a Dame for services to athletics.

For more information

Shot put hero Valerie Adams named Dame Companion of NZ Order of Merit in New Year’s Honours List

Dame Valerie Adams shares a moment with mum

Dame Valerie Adams: ‘I’m a strong wahine’

Kelana College head boy dies

The Vavaʻu community continued to be in mourning this afternoon after another student of one of its high schools died.

Kaniva News has been reliably informed Kelekolio Fahiua, the head boy of Kelana college has died.

The details about the cause of his death were not immediately available.

The news shocked friends and hundreds of Tongans from overseas who had attended the college’s 50th anniversary celebration this week.

The head boy’s  death came after two members of the Mailefihi Siuʻilikutapu College brass band group from Vavaʻu died in a crash in  New Zealand last week.

Talita Moimoi Fifita , 33, and 12-year-old Sione Taumalolo’s  bodies had been flown back home from Auckland to Tonga this morning.

-More to come

Triumphs for Tonga’s athletes, artists, workers and women

In the run-up to New Year’s Eve, Kaniva News looks back on the good news from 2016 and the achievements of Tongans around the world.

In this series of reports, we contniue to bring you the highlights of the best stories from each month so you can follow them through the year. You can read the first part here.

  • July

Victory in Budapest

With this year’s Olympics less than three weeks away, New Zealand’s Tongan-born shotput queen Valerie Adams scored a major victory in Budapest.

Adams won in the Hungarian Athletics grand prix meeting in Budapest with a 20.19m throw.

Afterwards she tweeted: “A win in Budapest with 20.19m and a meet record and seasons best. A great competition indeed. Thank you Hungary.”

Adams had been on the comeback trail after undergoing knee and shoulder surgery.

Sculpture

A massive white sculpture by Tongan architect Semisi Potauaine will feature in next year’s Headland Sculpture collection on Waiheke Island in Auckland.

The sculpture, whose Tongan name, Manuesina, translates as white bird, will weigh 4.5 tonnes and cost $NZ60,000.

The work, whose colour symbolises purity and the global spirit, was one of the 34 finalists chosen from 250 entries.

Potauaine, who is associated with Auckland University’s architecture and design programme, is internationally recognised for his work.

Women elected

The election of two women in Tonga in the town and district officer elections had paved the way for more women to enter the Tongan Parliament, according to New Zealand MP Jenny Salesa.

Salesa became the first Tongan speaking woman elected to the New Zealand Parliament in 2014.

Sisifa Fili became the first woman from ‘Eua to be elected to the role of District Officer, while Vika Kaufusi was elected as Town Officer for Haveluloto.

Four women candidates who came second in the election were entitled to take the roles of Acting District and Acting Town Officers.

Salesa said it was time Tonga supported its women.

  • August

Oiled Olympian

Tongan flagbearer Pita Taufatofua stole the show at the Olympic opening in Rio.

The part time model appeared in a traditional taʻovala and a lot of baby oil, causing something of a sensation on the internet, with media outlets all over the world picking up on his appearance.

Taufatofua was the kingdom’s first taekwondo competitor at Olympic level.

He was one of seven athletes competing for Tonga in Rio.

The other members of the team were Amini Fonua (swimming), Siueni Filimone (athletics), Arne Jensen (archery), Taina Halasim (athletics), Irene Prescott (swimming) and Lusitania Tatafu (archery).

They marched fully clothed.

Athletes compete

Tonga’s athletes began competing at the Rio Olympics in the archery events with archers Arne Jensen and Lusitania Tatafu and swimmer Amini Fonua leading the way.

Arne Jensen ranked 61st out of 64 after the first ranking.

In the subsequent round of 64 he scored three against seven by Sjef Vandenberg of the Netherlands.

In the  women’s individual archery, Lusitania Tatafu ranked 63rd out of 64 in the ranking round.

Amini Fonua competed in the 100 metres breastroke, with a time of 1:06:04, coming fifth in the first heat.

Outside the stadium

Tonga’s athletes did not win any medals at the Rio Olympics, but they dominated the news outside the stadium.

Tongan swimmer Amini Fonua launched a ferocious attack on The Daily Beast website after it outed a number of Olympians for using the Grindr app, which is designed to help gay people find partners.

Meanwhile, Britain’s Independent newspaper reported that the Tongan government was hoping for a tourism boom following Tongan flagbearer Pita Taufatofua’s well publicised appearance in the opening ceremony.

It quoted Tourism Tonga spokeswoman Seini Taumoepeau as saying there had been increased online interest in the kingdom, with thousands of people looking at a holiday website and visiting Tonga’s Facebook page.

A well-oiled exit

Tongan flag bearer Pita Taufatofua made a well-oiled exit from the Olympic Games, jumping on stage for a few moments during the closing ceremony in Rio.

The taekwondo competitor joined Julia Michaels and Kygo’s performance of their hit “Carry Me,” dancing as rain fell on the Maracana stadium.

Taufatofua lost his taekwondo match against Iranian medal favourite Sajjad Mardani on the weekend, but still managed to keep his fans cheering.

After the match he posted: “Felt soo privileged to get out on those mats and represent Tonga! There are no excuses, I started slow, got caught and lost to a legend of Taekwondo, a great opponent in Iran.  Thank you for the love, prayers and support without you all we would not be here! Malo Aupito, ofa atu.”

  • September

Apprentice wins

Print Apprentice of the Year Sione Tonga won the Pacific Leader award at The Edge Got a Trade? Got it Made! Future Business Leader’s Awards.

Tonga completed his print apprenticeship at the end of 2015 and is now a senior printer at Stratex NZ.

“It is every Pacific teenager’s dream to become a boss in a company, starting with nothing to become something,” Tonga said.

The judges said Tonga had “an amazing work ethic” and had made a number of positive changes in his life through his personal and professional development.

Stratex NZ Print Manager Ross Halliday said Tonga was a hard worker who deserved everything he had achieved.

The importance of kava

Without kava, Tongan cultural and social values were worthless, the kingdom’s Health Minister said.

Dr Saia Piukala told Kaniva News that in Tonga kava made a difference in people’s lives, regardless of whether they were the king or a commoner.

He said that within the Tongan context, kava was something pure because of its role in culture and society.

His Majesty goes shopping

The King of Tonga, His Majesty King Tupou VI, was spotted by a surprised Tongan shopper in Pukekohe, New Zealand last week.

Photos uploaded to Facebook showed the king apparently checking out some goods in a shop.

Kaniva News understands the 57 year-old monarch was in Auckland last week on his way to Singapore with his wife, Queen Nanasipau’u.

It is unusual for the king to do shopping or appear at public for personal purpose as the government pays his servants to do these things for him.

Kaniva launch

Seven years after it began serving readers in New Zealand and around the world, Kaniva Pacific News was officially launched on September 17.

Kaniva News founder Kalino Latu launched Kaniva Pacific News and the Ta’angafonua Trust  in front of an invited audience during a function held to celebrate his daughter Malia’s graduation.

“They are here to serve you with news, education and entertainment,” Latu said.

Guests at the function included  Deputy Leader of the Tongan Democratic Party, Dr Sitiveni Halapua,  Member for Manukau East Jenny Salesa and journalist Tapu Misa.

Misa, who has had a long career with the New Zealand Herald and other media outlets, spoke about the importance of Pasifika and Maori journalists having a say and represent in their communities in the mainstream media.

New finds

A Canadian archaeologist who has spent nearly 30 years researching Tonga’s past has discovered traces of previously unknown buildings and fortifications using airborne lasers.

Professor David Burley from Simon Fraser University in Vancouver found the remains of fortification ditches, a remnant of the Tongan civil war which occurred near the turn of the 19th century.

Many of the sites Burley and his team found were undocumented and even families who had lived near them for generations did not know about the earthworks.

Burley called many of the discovered fortifications “spectacular.”

Language week

Auckland is celebrating Tongan language week with dancing, music, story telling and the launch of a new book, Tongan Heroes.

Pacific Peoples Minister Peseta Sam Lotu-Iiga said Tongan Language Week was focussed on how the loto (spirit) of the Tongan people had contributed to New Zealand.

More Tongan people were born in New Zealand than in Tonga. This gives lea faka-Tonga (the Tonga language) and anga faka-Tonga (Tonga culture) a special place in New Zealand.

An earthquake, a boxing match and a new home for Baby X

  • October

Culture and efficiency

Tongan ministries need to become more efficient and effective, according to a young Tongan researcher awarded a doctorate at Auckland University’s graduation ceremony.

Sisikula Sisifa’s doctoral thesis looked at management practices in five development projects in Tonga.

It concluded that cultural differences in management practices undermined the projects’ success.

Sisifa and fellow Tongan Ilaisaane Fifita, both 31, were both awarded doctorates.

Earlier this year they became the first Pasifika women in Auckland University’s Business School when they began working as research fellows.

Fifita’s research looked at why Tongan and Pakeha female non-smokers don’t smoke.

She hopes her findings will help design of public health campaigns to persuade other women not to take up the habit.

Taiwanese origins

With China and Taiwan competing for the affections – and votes in the UN – of Pacific nations, new research shows that Pacific Islanders may have more in common with Taiwan than anybody had previously imagined.

New research claims that the people of the Pacific did not originate among the Papuan people of New Guinea, as originally thought, but in Taiwan.

And Australian archaeologist Professor Matthew Spriggs, from the Australian National University said the researchers had “cracked the problem of the origin of Pacific Islanders, often posed as the ‘origin of the Polynesians’.”

The findings were published in the prestigious American journal, Nature.

Couple win legal battle

A Tongan couple has won a three year legal battle with a tenant who the Supreme Court ruled had changed the rules of their agreement to benefit her without the couple understanding what was happening.

Yushen Yang had sought a declaration that she is living legally in buildings erected by her on land owned by ‘Olioni Makelita.

Mr Justice Scott said that over a period of years the agreement had been changed to the advantage of the tenants, that it appeared illegal building work had been done and that large sums of rent had never been paid.

He said the 2007 agreement should be rescinded.

Up in the air

University study didn’t work out for Sela Ahio Fonua, but she is literally up in the air over the way her career has developed.

She began studying for a medical degree at the University of the South Pacific’s Tongan campus, but now plays a vital role in keeping New Zealand’s air traffic flowing safely.

“I was a year into my medical studies, but medicine wasn’t a passion and this career that I didn’t know about looked interesting,” she told the Manawatu Standard.

Instead, she got a job as an accounting officer and after three months was asked to train as an air traffic controller.

Fonua is now working as an aerodrome/tower controller.

  • November

Face to face

Two young Tongan sisters in Samoa were lucky to talk face to face with Olympian Valerie Adams while she was waiting to talk to an audience in Apia.

Adams was in Samoa as New Zealand’s first Sport Ambassador to the Pacific.

She was on her last stop in Samoa to visit the Nobesity Kids Programme at the cricket field in Tuanaimato when she was approached by nine-years’-old Rosa and  four-years-old ‘Amelia Enoka.

The three time Olympic medallist returned to New Zealand yesterday after visiting Tonga and Samoa where she conducted coaching for promising athletes.

Earthquake

Pacific Parliamentarians visiting New Zealand for a political leaders’ forum kept their appointment in Wellington despite the earthquake that rattled New Zealand’s capital.

About 40 politicians were in New Zealand to attend the Pacific Parliamentarians’ Forum.

Tongan delegates included Penisimani Fefita, Akosita Lavulavu and Veivosa Taka.

In Wellington the group visited Parliament and took part in debates on Pacific issues.

Baby X

Baby X, the child who had been cared for by Vaiola hospital staff for three months after being found swaddled in plastic, found a new home.

The Supreme Court granted an application for adoption to a Tongan born couple living in New Zealand who the court decided would be able to provide the child with a financially secure and stable family environment.

In his judgement, Lord Chief Justice Paulsen said his paramount aim had been in doing what was best for the child.

Lord Chief Justice Paulsen praised the staff at the hospital for the care they had given Baby X.

Smiling prince

Young Prince Taufaʻahau Manumataongo was all smiles as he took the wheel of a solar powered vehicle in Nukuʻalofa.

The Prince was with his mother, Crown Princess Sinaitakala, who was the guest of honour at a ceremony launching a dozen locally assembled tuk tuks last week.

The solar powered vehicles are being sold for TP$15,000.

There are three versions: One for carrying frozen food, one for carrying passengers and one for carrying goods.

Vaka e Masiva

A trimaran designed to meet the needs of poor and isolated people in the outer Tongan islands was set to be launched in Auckland.

The project is informally called ‘Vaka e Masiva’ or Boat for the Poor.

Dr. Sitiveni Halapua, who was monitoring the boat project, said the running and operating costs for a boat to the Niuas were the key factors behind the project.

Dr. Halapua, whose father was from Niuafoʻou, came up with the idea while he was visiting the outer islands of Tonga during his political career in the kingdom in early 2000.

  • December

Boxing win

Tongan boxer Uaine (Junior) Fa won his WBO heavyweight fight in just three rounds.

Fa, who was taller and heavier than his opponent, gave Argentine boxer Pablo Magrini only the second loss in 20 fights.

Fa had a much longer reach than Magrini and Magrini tried to avoid his punches.

Fa, who returned to the ring this year, had a successful career as an amateur, but has been trying to find a promoter to take him on and give his professional career a boost.

LGBTI

Tongan Christians have been asked to be more open to LGBTI people.

Speaking after a recent national consultation with the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex community, the President of the Tonga National Council of Churches said Christians needed to be ready to engage in open discussion.

The initiative for the consultation came from the LGBTI community which want the government to change the law which penalises cross-dressing and sodomy.

Members of the LGBTI community met with church leaders and Parliamentarians.

Good Samaritans

A group of business women in Talihau, Vavaʻu were in tears after they were paid more than TP$20,000 by a couple for their koloa faka-Tonga after a previous deal was canceled by their Australian business partners.

The Talihau group was trading with Tongans in Australia and had a verbal agreement that the Australians would buy their Tongan traditional handicrafts this December.

Tongan-based Australian couple Houma and his wife Moa Liavaʻa Koloamatangi visited Vavaʻu this week and heard about the Talihau episode.

After talking to the women they bought all their goods for more than TP$20,000.

Donation

The Free Wesleyan Church headquarter in Tonga had donated $1.7 million to help finish building the Tuingapapai church in New Zealand.

The Free Wesleyan Church in Māngere, Auckland encountered financial management problems while constructing its multi-million church hall at 143 Favona Road.

The Tuingapapai church construction fell behind schedule and costs were higher than expected, Rev Dr Tevita Havea, the Church General Secretary, said.

Dr Havea said because of the problems the Church’s headquarter in Tonga stepped in to help according to its policy.

Auditorium

The king of Tonga named the Tuingapapai church’s new multi-million hall the Lesieli Tonga auditorium.

Lesieli Tonga adopted the late Queen Salote Tupou III after her mother died while she was young.

His Majesty King Tupou VI said his grandfather, the late Prince Tungi Mailefihi, Queen Salote’s husband, once said the domestic work Lesieli did should be remembered.

The king said Queen Salote repeatedly mentioned Lesieli as her first teacher who taught her important lessons including linguistic and behavioural etiquette.

Workers’ places

Another 1000 places will be available next season under New Zealand’s Recognised Seasonal Employment Scheme.

The RSE allows workers from Pacific Islands to work on New Zealand farms picking fruit and vegetables for a number of months each year.

Kaniva News understands the number of places has increased to 10,500.

In 2015 the cap for the 2015-16 season was raised from 9000 workers to 9500.

Internship

Tongan student Semi Hausia will return to the kingdom in February, determined to use what he has learned in an internship with Auckland Council to improve his country’s economy.

Hausia, who has been studying a Bachelor of Agricultural Science at Massey University, is completing a 10 week summer placement with Auckland Council’s Environmental Monitoring, Research and Evaluation (RIMU) division.

He is one of 15 students to win a placement as part of the New Zealand Scholarships Undergraduate Student Summer Internship.

The 32 year-old student said he planned to use what he is learning at Auckland Council to contribute to sustainable agricultural practices and to improving Tonga’s economy and pasture production.

Royal wedding

A wedding for Princess Pilolevu Tuita’s youngest daughter in Auckland set the Tongan community astir.

Hon. Lupeolo Halaevalu Moheofo Virginia RoseTuita and Hon. Lopeti Aleamotuʻa were set to tie the knot at Tuingapapai church in Mangere on December 17.

Hon. Aleamotuʻa is the second son of the late Taulupe Aleamotu’a and Mele Simiki Aleamotu’a.

His late father was the older brother of Lord Fielakepa.

Body of Tongan teen found in Australia

The body found by Police in Australia yesterday after 7.15am has been identified as of 14-year-old Tuipulotu Gallaher, Australian media have reported.

The Tongan boy went missing after he and his cousin got into trouble while swimming at a popular Sydney beach on Tuesday.

He was found after a large scale Police search aided by helicopters and jetskis had been scouring the waters for days.

Gallaher and his family, from Guildford in the city’s west, were on a day trip to Maroubra Beach.

Tui and his cousin, also 14, went for a swim at the southern end of the beach about 8.30pm, when they got into trouble.

A 26-year-old man walking past spotted the teens and jumped in the water to rescue them.

He reached one of the boys and pulled him back to shore. However when he went back into the surf, Tui had vanished.

Canadian rugby player shares his love of Tongan language online

A Canadian rugby player with a love for Polynesia is encouraging people to learn Tongan through a series of on-line videos.

Andrew Joakim, who played rugby in Australia, New Zealand and Tonga, has created a series of entertaining Tongan language instructional videos.

In the videos, he demonstrates that he can accurately and confidently pronounce Tongan words while also making jokes, pointing out cultural differences, and even demonstrating his Tongan and Samoan dancing skills.

Kaniva News contributor Todd Henry, who shares Joakim’s North American background, was intrigued to find Tongan language lessons coming from somewhere so geographically and culturally remote from the Pacific.

He tracked Joakim down and this interview is the result.

Henry: Let’s start with the basics then, where are you originally from?

Joakim: I am originally from Tottenham, Ontario, it’s a small town in Canada.

Henry: Are you part Tongan?

Joakim: I’m not at all Tongan or Polynesian. My mother moved to Canada from Scotland and my Dad moved here from India.

Henry: Eastern Canada isn’t known for having a significant population of Tongan expats, so how did you first find out about Tonga? What made you want to begin learning about Tongan language and culture?

Joakim: I went to play rugby in Inverell in New South Wales. All of the other import players were from Tonga, our club had a connection with the Ha’ateiho Spartans. I hadn’t heard of Tonga before that. I was working with them, and I was fascinated by their stories about home.

Our team went for an end of season trip, and I fell in love with Tonga. Usually when on vacation, I would get sick of the place by the end and look forward to going home. But when visiting Tonga, I didn’t want to leave.

After that, I went to play in Dargaville in New Zealand and lived in a house for import players, they were all Tongan. I used to watch a Maori TV show about Te Reo and learned a bit of it. I worked at Silver Fern farms, there were plenty of Tongans. All of the signs at work were in English and Tongan, so I started picking a little bit up.

Henry: What year was that?

Joakim: I went to Australia in 2007, played two seasons, Tonga in 2008, New Zealand in 2009

Henry: What was it about Tongan culture that had such a profound effect on you?

Joakim: Mostly it was the attitude of the people. They are such genuine, friendly and positive people. I remember I was walking by myself and I was seen by a group of friends eating, they called over to me to come join them.

Henry: Where in Tonga did you spend most of your time?

Joakim: When I first visited, just in Nukualofa. But in 2010 my parents were considering buying a bar in Neiafu, so I went with them. They didn’t end up getting it, but I became friends with a family and ended up staying there for six months, this was in Utungake.

Henry: So your parents share your affinity for Tonga?

Joakim: Not really, they were just interested in a change, but it was too dramatic of a change for them. They ended up settling in British Columbia.

Henry: Do you have plans to move permanently back to Tonga or elsewhere in the Pacific one day?

Joakim: My dream would be to split my time between New Zealand and either Tonga or Samoa, that way I could enjoy the best of both worlds.

Henry: Your Lea Faka Tonga instructional videos on YouTube are getting a fair bit of attention online as of late. How would you rate your fluency in the language?

Joakim: I’m not as good as I used to be, when I was in Vava’u I was much better. I haven’t really had a chance to use it much since then. I can watch the Tongan Broadcasting Corporations news programs on YouTube and understand most of what they are saying, and in conversation I can get my point across. But now I am focusing on getting better at it, I want to be the best Palangi at speaking Tongan. Not for bragging rights, I just love the language and the culture, and I love the reaction I get from Tongans. After hearing me speak they think I served a mission, when they find out I haven’t they seem so surprised.

Henry: That’s a great goal, and we are up against some stiff competition! Are you a polyglot (speaker of many languages)? Or is it just English and Tongan in your linguistic arsenal?

Joakim: Growing up in Canada we had to learn French, I only retained a little bit of it. After learning Tongan I learned Samoan. I am not as good in Samoan as I am with Tongan, but I learned enough for when I spent some time there teaching a computer class at a high school in Savai’i. I’m thinking of doing a video where I show myself learning Uvean, or Futunan, to show that adults can learn as long as they have the passion to do so.

Henry: So are you well travelled in the Pacific Islands?

Joakim: I’ve been to Tongatapu, a few islands in the Vava’u chain, Savai’i and Upolu in Samoa. I would like to see Tokelau before the ocean swallows it up. Would also love to see Futuna, Uvea, Ha’apai, and the Niuas. If I were to go to Uvea and Futuna, it would be interesting to see how I could get by with the Tongan and Samoan that I know.

Henry: There is a lot of crossover with all of the Polynesian languages, the Austronesian language group itself reaches from the Pacific Islands all the way out to Madagascar.

Joakim: Yeah, it’s fascinating.

Henry: Are there any Tongans that live near you in Canada?

Joakim: Last summer I was a team liaison for the Ikale Tahi for their Toronto leg of the Pacific Nations Cup, and I got to meet the Tongans that live in Toronto. There are not many of them, probably no more than ten. It’s a small world, one of them is friends with my cousin.

Henry: Yes, there are relatively few intrepid Tongans who have settled on the cold eastern seaboard of North America. I know of only one Tongan family that resides in my home state of Pennsylvania, they own a very successful business in their town. There are surely more Tongans in Pennsylvania, but I have yet to meet them.

This leads into my next question: Many Tongans now live in places that don’t have established Tongan communities, which obviously makes retaining or learning the language more difficult. What tips do you have for learning Tongan in a place where it’s impossible to go out in public and practice by speaking directly to other people?

Joakim: Listen to Tongan radio stations at a low volume, it makes you listen more attentively. Watch Tongan news on YouTube, even if you don’t understand most of it, just try to pick out the words that you do know. Speak as if you are speaking with someone, you have to actually say the words out loud to progress. At first, when I was learning the language just through reading, I found great difficulty in going to actually speak it. Knowing how to read it and write it is one thing, but the pathways have to be formed between the brain and the mouth, and it will only happen by actually speaking it. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes, because you will, and you will learn from them.

Henry: And now people can also tune into your YouTube channel to learn Tongan from your instructional series. What is your ultimate goal here? Will these videos be an ongoing thing?

Joakim: I want to get to the point where I can earn enough to devote all of my time to making even more videos. I have a lot of topics that I would like to cover, from weight loss, languages (next one will be Samoan), travel, religion, futurism, comedy sketches, rugby, meditation, lucid dreaming, really anything that interests me. I feel that people are moving away from watching scripted TV shows, reality shows, they seem so disingenuous. I have almost 1500 subscribers now, I would like to reach 100,000 one day. To be able to have that many people interested in what I have to show that would be a great privilege and responsibility.

Henry: As you know, there are many languages in the world that are in danger of extinction. Do you feel that the Tongan language is currently under threat? If so, what are some factors that you feel are currently contributing to the decline?

Joakim: It’s hard for me to judge whether it is under threat or not, but I wouldn’t say that it is thriving or growing. In Tonga, many people would automatically assume that one who is able to speak English would be smarter than a Tongan who cannot. This view needs to change, because there are many different types of intelligence. For Tongans who move abroad, it seems that many of them do not speak Tongan to their children because they want them to focus on English. I wish they would realise that their children will learn English outside of the home, and that using Tongan in the home will not diminish their ability to learn English. I’ve had so many messages from second generation Tongans who want to learn Tongan because their parents wouldn’t speak it with them.

Henry: The first YouTube video of yours that I saw was “The Difference Between Tongans and Samoans”.  What was your inspiration for making that video?

Joakim: I found it interesting that cultures that share so much in common could have such rivalries. I noticed when I was in Australia that the Tongans and the Aboriginal Australians in our town did not get along, and then the same in New Zealand with the Maori and Tongans. Even in Canada, the Jamaicans and the Trinis (from Trinidad) have similar problems with each other. I think it’s most prevalent in the USA between Tongans and Samoans. I thought if I could point it out in a humorous way, it might help to ease the tensions. If you just tell them that it’s silly they might get defensive about it and dig in even more so, laughter is the best medicine.

Henry: One thing I personally love about Tongan and other Polynesian cultures is their ability to laugh, so your approach to the issue is really good!

Malo ‘aupito for the Talanoa Andrew, is there anything else you would like to say to finish up? Perhaps a sneak peak of what’s to come in your YouTube series?

Joakim: In my YouTube series I am moving into actually learning how to say sentences now, the first two lessons focused more on the basics. For my weight loss vlogs, I’ve lost 40 pounds now, once I’ve lost another 30, watch out for a really funny video I’m going to make which will expose the weight loss industry for what it is.

For my YouTube videos, I want to give credit to Eric Shumway, my lessons have been heavily relying on his book, Intensive Course in Tongan. I just try to present it in a way that’s more suited for most learners in our present time.

Henry: Malie Andrew, keep up the good work and all the best for your future endeavours. How about we do a follow up interview next year conducted completely in Lea Faka Tonga?

Joakim: Thank you Todd. Yes, that is a great idea.

For more information

For anyone in Auckland, NZ who is looking to learn Tongan (or another Pacific language), in addition to Andrew’s YouTube videos, please consider attending a language course offered by the Pacific Education Centre.  These excellent courses are free, available in several different locations around Auckland, and are taught by tutors who are experts in their language.

For more of Todd Henry’s stories, visit https://culturesofoblivion.com/

A time to remember and a time to hope for the future

In the run-up to New Year’s Eve, Kaniva News looks back on the good news from 2016 and the achievements of Tongans around the world.

In this series of reports, we contniue to bring you the highlights of the best stories from each month so you can follow them through the year. You can read the first and the second parts here.

  • April

Recruiting centenary

This year ANZAC Day commemorated the centenary of two important events during the First World War – the Battle of the Somme and the arrival of a New Zealand army recruiting team in Tonga.

The Tongans were among many Pacific islanders who served in the New Zealand, Australian, or French armed forces during the First World War.

Most of the initial volunteers from Tonga were Europeans or part-Europeans who joined the British, New Zealand or Australian armies.

In 1916, a recruiting team visited Tonga and persuaded a number of men to sign up.

Many volunteers from Tonga served with Maori or Cook Islands units.

Hardship give hope

A Tongan graduate from the Martin Hautus Institute in Auckland said growing up in poverty and the lessons she learned at the ʻUnuaki ʻo Tonga Institute were the forces that drove her to graduate.

Keylani Lisa Marie Hale Savieti, 27, graduated with a Diploma in Information Technology and will continue her studies at the Whitireia New Zealand Institute in May.

She hopes to graduate with a BA in 2018.

Savieti said her success was driven by coping with the huge challenges she faced from the moment she arrived in New Zealand in January last year.

“It was difficult, but I know that’s how life is and I have to bear in my mind our little island and how people are brought up there in poverty,” Savieti said.

Court restores land

The Land Court has overturned an attempt by the Minister of Lands to take away a block of land that was given to a New Zealand-based Tongan 18 years ago and give it to another man.

In February 1997 Havea Folau was allocated land belonging to the estate of Noble Ma’afu, the father of the present title holder and Minister of Lands.

In his decision, the president of the Land Court, O.G.Paulsen, said he was satisfied that the land was allocated to Mr Folau, based on the evidence of the procedures followed at the time.

Mr Paulsen said the  Minister had  no  power  to  cancel  the  grant  or  to  make  a  grant  of  the  land  to somebody else.

PM turns 75

The man who led the fight to bring democracy to Tonga has turned 75.

Born on April 7, 1941, Samuela ʻAkilisi  Pōhiva  has dedicated much of his life to politics and his endeavor to allow the people to have their say and run the government.

A look at his family and political life shows a fearless man with great courage, bravery and determination.

In his political campaigns Pōhiva has maintained that the king and the royals would be more loved and respected if they gave up their powers as rulers and became only honorary figures.

Pōhiva’s political career can be traced back into 1976 when he attended the University of the South Pacific in Fiji.

He  became Tonga’s first commoner Prime Minister in December, 2014.

Pope calls for tolerance

Pope Francis has called for more tolerance of gays in a groundbreaking document.

While he made clear that the Catholic Church’s official line on homosexuality had not changed, he said the Church should be more open to gay people and deal with them respectfully.

Quite how his comments will be received by the Catholic community in Tonga is yet to be seen.

Last year Radio New Zealand International reported that Cardinal Mafi had said he would not support the government signing the United Nations’ Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) because he thought it conflicted with the Church’s beliefs on same sex marriage and abortion.

Issues of women clergy and homosexuality have already threatened to split the Anglican Communion and the acceptance of gay clergy caused many Tongans to leave the Methodist Church in New Zealand.

Press freedom

Journalists working in Tonga enjoy more press freedom than their counterparts in the United Kingdom or the United States, according to a new report from Reporters Sans Frontiers.

And the rise in press freedom has coincided with the country’s introduction of democratic elections, according to RSF.

The World Press Freedom Index, placed Tonga 37th out of 180 countries. That represented a seven point rise over the RSF’s 2015 survey.

Last year Tonga rose 19 places to 44th on the global listing

  • May

Prayer and picking berries

Prayer, determination and five years of picking berries led young Tongan barrister Elleanor Manu to graduate from the University of Waikato and to be admitted to the High Court of New Zealand.

Manu graduated with a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) and a BA in Social Science, majoring in Political Science.

Because she failed her earlier course in Health Science she had to fund her law studies and with the help of her family, paid her way through university by picking berries.

“We have done this as a family annually and it has been a blessing in disguise for me seeing the hand of God move in our life,” her mother Nanuma said..

The last and final picking season was just before Elleanor’s admission to the High Courts.

College anniversary

Preparations for Tupou College’s 150th anniversary, which began in Nuku’alofa on June 17 united ex-students from various schools and members of different churches.

The Secretary of the Tupou College Alumni in New Zealand, Moi Kaufononga, told Kaniva News it was a blessing for them to see the celebration will be celebrated not just by the Tupou College alumni and the Free Wesleyans.

Kaufononga described the unification as “warming” and “congenial.”-

  • June

Chinese tourists

Chinese tourists will no longer need a visa to visit Tonga.

China joined a long list of countries whose citizens do not require a visa to visit the island kingdom if they are staying for less than 30 days.

A visa is not required for most bona-fide visitors to enter Tonga for stays of one month or less, providing that the visitor holds a valid passport and an onward air or sea ticket and the immigration authorities are satisfied that the visitor has adequate funds for the visit.

Economic growth

Tonga could look forward to economic growth of three percent a year for the next three years, according to the kingdom’s 2016-17 budget.

The government said  preparations for the 2019 Pacific Games, along with number of other large projects, would support further growth.

According to the Budget Statement 2016-17, growth would be supported in the short term by a number of major events and building projects, including the Tupou College 150th anniversary and the Mormon church’s centenary.

Boxer remembers Ali

World heavyweight boxing champion Mohammed Ali, who died this month, gave Tongan boxer Paea Wolfgramme some advice he never forgot.

Following the news of Ali’s death Wolfgramme, who became the first Tongan to win an Olympic medal, recalled how he met Ali, the greatest boxer of the 20th century.

“That boyish, handsome face I had grown up was now a still, unmoving, mask,” Wolfgramme said.

“His mouth famous for never stopping, now hardly moved. He said: “Get yourself a jab…you can’t fight without it.”

to be continued

ACC will provide funeral grant for Gisborne bus crash victims

New Zealand’s Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) will provide a funeral grant of NZ$6000 for each of the two people who died in last weekend’s bus crash in Gisborne.

A spokesperson for ACC told Kaniva  News ACC would also cover the costs of everybody who was injured in the crash while they are in New Zealand.

The news came in the aftermath of last night’s memorial service for student Sione Taumalolo, 11, and Talita Moimoi Fifita, 33, who died when their bus went off the road and down an embankment on State Highway Two  near Gisborne.

Hundreds of people attended the memorial service at the Methodist church in Grey Lynn.

It was attended by HRH Princess Salote Pilolevu Mafile’o Tuita and the Minister of Pacific Peoples, Hon. Alfred Ngaro.

Radio New Zealand reported that the president of the Methodist Church of New Zealand, Rev. Prince Devanandan, was among the church leaders who paid tribute to Taumalolo and Fifita.

“They came joyfully to this land to celebrate, to do their part for the school they were serving, but they are going back in this unfortunate way from us,” Rev. Devanandan said.

The bodies of Taumalolo and Fifita will be flown back to Tonga tomorrow (December 31)

The bus was carrying the Mailefihi Siu’ilikutapu College brass, which was on a fund raising tour of New Zealand.

Survivors began flying back to Auckland from Gisborne yesterday morning and some members of the band and the college choir played at last night’s service.

They also played at a memorial concert at the House of Breakthrough Church in Gisborne on Wednesday night.

Kaniva News understands that seven people injured in the crash are still in hospital. Two are in Hastings, two in Waikato and three at Gisborne Hospital.

Meanwhile, ACC said the families of the deceased may receive additional payments.

The spokesperson for ACC said that while they were unable to discuss individual payments, in general terms, when a person died in an accident, ACC could also provide a one-off survivor’s grant of about $6455.00 payable to a surviving spouse of the deceased.

A one-off survivor’s grant of about$3200 can also be paid to any surviving children under 18 years of age.

A lump sum payment may also be available for permanent injury to an individual.

The main points

  • ACC will provide a funeral grant of NZ$6000 for each of the two people who died in last weekend’s bus crash in Gisborne.
  • A spokesperson for ACC told Kaniva News ACC would also cover the costs of everybody who was injured in the crash while they are In New Zealand.
  • The news came in the aftermath of last night’s memorial service for Student Sione Taumalolo, 11, and Talita Moimoi Fifita, 33, who died when their bus went off the road and down an embankment on State Highway Two near Gisborne.
  • Hundreds of people attended the memorial service at the Methodist church in Grey Lynn.

Rugby Sevens captain confirmed dead in Veitongo crash

The captain of the Tongan Rugby Sevens team Atelea ‘Ōkati, has been confirmed as one of the people killed in the Veitongo crash.

The other person killed was ‘Unaloto Lepa.

Family members have expressed condolences and sympathy for their deaths over social media.

The crash occurred yesterday morning on Taufa’ahau Road in Veitongo.

Police said a car heading west driven by a 30 year-old man from Halaleva and carrying three passengers tried to overtake another car crashed head-on with a minibus that was heading east.

Apart from the deaths, two other passengers received major injuries and one is in a critical condition.

This latest fatal death brings the total number of deaths on the road in 2016 to 18.

Acting Chief Superintendent Tevita Vailea said he was saddened by the fact that so many families had lost relatives on Tongan roads this year.

He said the death toll was 10 higher than it was at this time last year.

He urged drivers to be more careful on the road in the lead up to the New Year.

“While the full circumstances of Thursday’s crash are yet to be determined I can say that all too often Police are attending serious crashes that are avoidable,” Acting Chief Superintendent Tevita Vaileasaid.

He said fatigue, alcohol, speed and inexperience were all being considered as factors in the most recent crash.

“Crashes like this are preventable and we all need to do our part to reduce deaths and injuries on our roads,” he said.

“We extend our sympathy to the families of those involved and our thoughts are with their loved ones at this tragic time.”

The main points

  • Former captain of the Tongan Rugby Sevens team Atelea ‘Okati, has been confirmed as one of the people killed in the Veitongo crash.
  • The other person killed was ‘Unaloto Lepa.
  • The crash occurred yesterday morning on Taufa’ahau Road in Veitongo.
  • Police said a car heading west driven by a 30 year-old man from Halaleva and carrying three passengers tried to overtake another car crashed head-on with a minibus that was heading east.

READ MORE

Two killed in Veitongo collision this morning

Police call for water safety after missing man’s body recovered

Tongan Police have urged the public to be careful in the water after they recovered the body of a missing man yesterday.

Fisiatina Puafisi, 45, of Tofoa was last seen walking towards the waterfront opposite Little Italy in Nuku’alofa  with a kayak on Friday 23 December.

His body was recovered from the water along the Sopu Coastline about 1.3km north of the Hifofua wreck by a Police Search and Rescue team yesterday at at 3:45pm.

A search was launched after Police received a missing at sea report.

The Police Search and Rescue boat, the ‘Alotolu, was commanded by Acting Deputy Commissioner ‘Atunaisa Taumoepeau.

Tongan Police launched three new police SAR boats in December 2015.

Acting Deputy Commissioner Taumoepeau said since then police had saved 65 lives in 19 Police SAR operations.

“Our message to all this summer is to think safety before you put your boat or yourself in the water,” he said.

“Be prepared and keep an eye on the weather and water conditions.

He said anybody putting out to sea should make sure they had a means of  communication , life jackets, emergency flares and a beacon.

Beaches

He said people using the beaches over the Christmas-New Year break should make sure they were familiar with the area they were using.

They should be sure of their swimming ability so they could get themselves out of trouble or wear a life jacket.

Acting Deputy Commissioner Taumoepeau said people should always

  • Look at the tides and currents
  • Supervise children whenever they are near water
  • Check for hidden objects before jumping or diving in
  • Get in the water with children
  • Monitor the weather and water
  • Call for help at the first sign of trouble
  • Remember that alcohol and water activities did not safe mix
  • Check the sea worthiness of their boat and safety equipment before going out
  • Have fun

The main points

  • Tongan Police have urged the public to be careful in the water after they recovered the body of a missing man yesterday.
  • Their warning came after Search and Rescue team recovered the body of missing canoeist Fisiatina Puafisi late yesterday afternoon.
  • Police also warned people to be careful when swimming this season and to make sure their boat and safety equipment were in good condition.