Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi was a Fijian Ratu and early colonial administrator in what was then the British Crown Colony of Fiji.
Background
Ratu Madraiwiwi was a Bauan chief, and the son of the Bauan chief and rebel Ratu Mara Kapaiwai (who was executed by his cousin Ratu Seru Epenisa Cakobau). His mother, Adi Loaloakubou was half-sister of Ratu Cakobau the Vunivalu of Bau, and had been promised first to the Tui Nakelo in return for support against one of many campaigns between Bau and Rewa. This promise was reneged upon and she was given to Ratu Gavidi, Komai Nadrukuta (Chief of the village of Lasakau - the second village on Bau Island).
Career
Their descendants are still the ruling family in Lasakau. In 1886, Ratu Madraiwiwi married Adi Litiana Maopa, a granddaughter of Ratu Seru Epenisa Cakobau, the King who ceded Fiji to the United Kingdom in 1874. They had 6 children: Ratu Sir Josefa Vanayaliyali Lalabalavu Sukuna, Adi Kacaraini Loaloakubou, Adi Kuini Vuikaba, Ratu Tiale Wimbeldon Vuiyasawa, Adi Salote Mokoiwaqa and Ratu Doctor Jione Atonio Rabici Doviverata.
Their eldest, Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna (1888-1958), played a pivotal role in the formation of modern Fiji, by forging the embryonic institutions for the modern nation.
Her granddaughter and namesake, Ratu Madraiwiwi"s great granddaughter: Adi Kuini Vuikaba Speed was married to the late Doctor Timoci Bavadra a former Prime Minister of Fiji, infamously deposed by Fiji"s first military coup and herself later served in the People"s Coalition Government of Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry as Deputy Prime Minister. Their youngest son Ratu Doctor Jione Atonio Rabici Doviverata was the first iTaukei to become a fully qualified doctor.
Doctor Ratu Dovi"s son, Ratu Madraiwiwi"s grandson and namesake: Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi, is a prominent lawyer and former High Court judge who served as Fiji"s Vice-President from 2004 to 2006, and is now the Chief Justice of Nauru. After joining the Audit Office as a clerk at an early age, Ratu Madraiwiwi had steadily worked his way up through the civil service.
He held the posts of Roko Tui Ra (from 1896) and Roko Tui Tailevu (from 1912) in the Colonial Native Administration.