Whakahuihui Vercoe

Whakahuihui Vercoe

The Most Reverend Whakahuihui ("Hui") Vercoe PCNZM MBE (4 June 1928 – 13 September 2007) was an Anglican clergyman from New Zealand. He was the Archbishop of New Zealand from 2004 to 2006, the first Māori to hold that office. He was also Bishop of Aotearoa from 1981, the first person to be elected to that position by the congregation rather than being appointed by the church hierarchy. He held both offices until his retirement in 2006. He was also the first person to become a Principal Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit after the rank was introduced in 2000.

Early life

Vercoe was born in Torere, a coastal Māori village ("kainga") in the Eastern Bay of Plenty, near Opotiki on the North Island, to Joseph Vercoe and Wyness Williams. He was named "Whakahuihui" ("to gather together") to record the crowds that gathered to pay their respects to his grandmother, who died on the day he was born. His paternal grandfather, Henry Vercoe, was a Cornish farmer and settler in New Zealand. His father left the family soon after he was born, and he was raised by his mother and maternal grandfather, a Māori farmer, in a small earthen-floored shack ("kauta"). He was educated at Torere Native School, Feilding Agricultural High School, and the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, before studying theology at College House.

Clerical career

Vercoe was ordained as a deacon in 1951 and as a priest in the Anglican Church of New Zealand in 1952. He served as a parish priest in, successively, Wellington, Wairarapa, and Rangitikei.

He became politically active, and supported the "No Maoris No Tour" movement in 1960, which complained that no Māoris were permitted to join the All Blacks rugby tour to South Africa that year.

He joined the New Zealand Army in 1960, and became a military chaplain. He ministered to New Zealand forces in Malaya from 1961 to 1963, and the Anzac Brigade in Vietnam from 1968 to 1969, and was chaplain at Burnham Military Camp from 1965 to 1971. He was awarded the MBE in 1970.

He was Principal of Te Waipounamu Girls' School from 1971 to 1976, and then Vicar in Ohinemutu from 1976 to 1978. He was promoted to become Archdeacon of Tairawhiti and Vicar-General to the Bishopric of Aotearoa in 1978.

Episcopal career

Vercoe was consecrated as Bishop of Aotearoa ("Pihopa o Aotearoa") at Houmaitawhiti Marae in Rotorua in 1981.

He was a leading advocate of Māori rights and supporter of the Treaty of Waitangi. On Waitangi Day in 1990, the 150th anniversary of the Treaty, he complained in a speech attended by Dame Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangikaahu, Queen Elizabeth II, the Governor-General Paul Reeves, and Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer, that the promises made in the Treaty had not been honoured by The Crown. As a result of the continuing tensions between the different peoples of New Zealand, he also opposed immigration to New Zealand.

He was in favour of separate public institutions — such as schools — for Māori people, and in 1980 became the first head of the Māori arm of the Anglican Church in New Zealand to be elected, rather than appointed by the church hierarchy. The Anglican Church in New Zealand split into three sections in 1992, one for the Māori, another for white New Zealanders (known in Māori as "Pakeha"), and a third for Polynesians, recognising the three separate cultural traditions ("tikanga") in New Zealand. Vercoe became head of the Māori section.

He became a Principal Commander of the Order of Merit of New Zealand (the equivalent of a knighthood) for services to the Maoris and the community in 2000, and became Primate and Archbishop of Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia ("Pihopa Matamua") in 2004.

He held conservative religious views, condemning homosexuality as "unnatural" and "an abomination". A storm of controversy erupted in June 2004 when the "New Zealand Herald" reported his vision of a "world without gays". [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=3570843] He ordained women priests, but opposed the ordination of female bishops, and refused to attend the ordination of New Zealand's first Anglican bishop in 1991, when Dr Penny Jamieson was installed as Bishop of Dunedin.

He was diagnosed with cancer of the brain in 2005, and retired due to ill health in 2006. After he stepped down, the office of Archbishop has been shared by the heads of the three "tikanga", with William Brown Turei as Primate.

Private life

Vercoe married Doris Eivers in 1951. They had three sons.

He died in Lynmore, near Rotorua, his home for over 20 years. He was survived by his wife and their sons. After a farewell ceremony at St Faith's Church in Rotorua on 14 September, his "tangi" (funeral) at Torere Marae was attended by over 40 archbishops and bishops of the Anglican Church. He was buried at the Torere "urupa" (burial ground) on 17 September.

References

* [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article2979869.ece Obituary, "The Independent", 20 September 2007]
* [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=252&objectid=10463622 Obituary, "New Zealand Herald", 15 September 2007]
*" [http://www.anglicanchurch.co.nz/Files/Spring-2006-Taonga---Part-1.pdf Hui Vercoe: The making of a 'radical bishop'] ", "Anglican Taonga", No.22, Spring 2006, p.16-21


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