Te Kumeroa "Ngoingoi" Pēwhairangi, QSM was a prominent teacher of, and advocate for, Māori language and culture, and the composer of many songs.
Background
She was born Te Kumeroa Ngoingoi Ngāwai on 29 December 1921 at Tokomaru Bay, on New Zealand"s East Coast, the eldest of five children of Hori Ngāwai, a labourer and minister in the Ringatū faith from the Te Whānau-a-Ruataupare hapū of the Ngāti Porou iwi of Tokomaru Bay, and his wife Wikitoria Te Karu of Ngāti Tara Tokanui in the Hauraki region.
Education
She attended Hukarere Girls’ School from 1938 to 1941.
Career
She spearheaded the Māori Renaissance in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Ngoi was a niece of Tuini Ngāwai, another prominent composer and promoter of the language and culture. In the early 1940s, Ngoi travelled around New Zealand in a fundraising drive for the war effort with the Hokowhitu-ā-Tū Concert Party.
Her aunt, who founded the group, trained her in kapa haka performance and groomed her for leadership.
She continued her involvement after the war. The only child of the marriage was a son, Terewai Pēwhairangi, but they fostered many other children.
Ngoi taught Māori language and tutored the Māori club at Gisborne Girls" High School for three years from 1973. In 1974 she also began teaching a course of Māori studies in Gisborne for the University of Waikato.
In 1977, Kara Puketapu, the new secretary of the Department of Māori Affairs called on her assistance in setting up Tū Tangata, a scheme that targeted at-risk Māori youth in the cities, and attempted to connect them with their iwi.
She continued working for the Department as an adviser, and was involved in the preliminary consultations that led to the establishment of the kōhanga reo movement, which saw children receiving their schooling in Māori. From 1978 on, she was an adviser to the National Council of Adult Education. In this capacity she promoted Māori language and culture around the country, especially in rural areas.
Among Pākehā who have heard of her, she is best known as the composer of the poi song Poi East, which topped New Zealand charts in 1984 in a recording by Dalvanius Prime and the Patea Māori Club, and sold 15,000 copies.
She also wrote the popular song East Ipo which was performed by Prince Tui Teka. She died in Tokomaru Bay on January 29, 1985.
Her tangihanga (funeral) was held at Pākirikiri Marae. A waiata tangi (lament) composed for her by Doctor Timoti Karetu was for a number of years the signature piece of the kapa haka group of the Te Tumu School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies at the University of Otago.