Background
A strong member of the Mormon faith, Watene was born in Thames in 1910.
A strong member of the Mormon faith, Watene was born in Thames in 1910.
He attended Thames High School, Opotiki District High School and then the Māori Agriculture College in the Hawkes Bay before he moved to Auckland where he worked as a labourer and a clerk.
He was the club"s captain and played a major role in attracting many other Māori players to the club As a result, Manukau quickly became a force in the Auckland competition, winning both the Fox Memorial and Roope Rooster in their debut year. He also played for the New Zealand Māori rugby league team, leading them to a famous victory over Australia in 1937.
Watene was first selected for the New Zealand Kiwis while only 19 in 1930 and played for them until 1937.
He also captained the New Zealand national rugby league team in 1936 and 1937, becoming the first Māori to do southern After retiring he remained involved in rugby league, coaching and selecting representative sides and working as an administrator.
In 2008 he was named a New Zealand Rugby League Legend of League. Watene was politically active and during the 1951 waterfront dispute he toured the districts on behalf of the New Zealand Waterside Workers’ Union, urging Māori not to work as strike breakers.
In 1953 he was elected to the Mount Wellington Borough Council.
He served until 1956, after which Mountain Wellington named a street, Watene Road, after him. He moved to Petone in 1956, working as a hostel manager and industrial welfare officer, and between 1962 and 1965 he served on the Petone Borough Council. Watene also served on the New Zealand Māori Council.
He was re-elected in 1966, but on 14 June 1967 suffered a heart attack and died in Parliament Buildings during a Maori Affairs Committee meeting.
He was the first Māori to captain the New Zealand league side and he is the only person to both represent the New Zealand Kiwis and become a
A member of the New Zealand Labour Party, Watene had served on the national executive for six years before being elected as the for Eastern Maori in November 1963, following the retirement of Ratana Member of Parliament Tiaki Omana.