T.w. ratana family tree

Tahupotiki Wiremu Ratana

When Tahupotiki Wiremu Ratana was born on 25 January 1873, in Awahuri, Manawatū-Whanganui, New Zealand, his father, Te Uru-Kowhai Wiremu Ratana, was 28 and his mother, Ihipera Koria Matuakore, was 37. He married Te Urumanao Ngauta Ngapaki-Baker in 1893, in Rangitikei, New Zealand. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 3 daughters. He immigrated to San Francisco, California, United States in 1925. He died on 18 September 1939, in Rātana, Manawatū-Whanganui, New Zealand, at the age of 66.

Taupotiki Wiremu Ratana

Taupotiki Wiremu Ratana (1870-1939) was the founder of the Ratana Church and a major force in the spiritual, political, and material development of the New Zealand Maori people.

Taupotiki Wiremu (Bill) Ratana was born on January 25, 1870, to Urukohai, or Wiremu Kowhai, a farmer reputedly possessed of prophetic powers, and Ihipera. His upbringing appears to have given little indication of the role he was later to play, although the formative influence of an aunt, Mere Rikiriki, should be noted. She was renowned as something of a prophet, and in 1912 she indicated that her nephew would become the focus of the aspirations and striving of his people.

His relative lack of formal education—he ended his school career in the fourth grade—served to distinguish him from other Maori leaders such as those active in the Young Maori Party, but this lack of a high level of European style education did not disadvantage him. The post World War I era saw some disillusionment with things European and with the traditional hierarchial structure of Maori society. Returni

Healing and Revival


 

"Spiritual, Physical, and Political Healing for the Maori People"

 

Tahupotiki Wiremu (Bill) Ratana was born January 25, 1873 in the district of Rangitikei. Ratana was raised by his foster mother Ria Te Ra I Kokiritia Ai Hamuera and was baptised into the Methodist Church. His aunt, Mere Rikiriki, ran the "Holy Ghost Mission" and had a reputation for faith healing. There was also a strong prophetic tradition within the Maori culture. In 1881 a local Christian leader, Te Potangaroa, prophesied that a church would be raised up that would be just for the Maori people. People recognized as having a prophetic gift were called "the mouthpice of God" by the Maori. Ratana's aunt prophesied several times that Ratana would receive a sign from God and become a Maori spiritual leader. Ratana struggled in his early life with "hearing voices" which some people thought was mental illness and others the hand of God. He only attended school for a short time, reaching the fourth standard (grade). He left school and

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