Haare Williams is a man of many accomplishments – lecturer, broadcaster, negotiator, researcher, poet, writer, activist and artist among others – yet he describes himself first and foremost as a teacher. He is a listener, too. But for the purposes of this interview, he speaks. I listen.
Haare – Te Aitanga-a-Māhaki, Rongowhakaata (Gisborne) and Tūhoe (Ōhiwa) – is a lyrical man. His sentences flow like the poetry he writes, and inevitably, you are drawn into his childhood memories of speaking only te reo while living with his paternal and maternal grandparents on the shores of Ōhiwa Harbour, 20 kilometres west of Ōpōtiki.
Born in the mid-1930s, Williams has led an illustrious life working alongside Māori and Pākehā. He was one of a group of teachers and academics behind the revival of te reo and Māori self-worth through education, arts and broadcasting. Yet his origins could scarcely have been more humble.
As Williams speaks, you can smell the sea and hear the voices that surrounded him as a child. You can also sense the deep abiding love he holds for whānau and whenua.
He lived with his paternal grandparents, Rimaha and Wairemana, in a whare raupō (thatched house). “My grandfather built it, tucked into the clay bank, affording us warmth in winter and coolness in summer.”
The firepit is still there today, formed with