Mana Waka is a 1990 New Zealand film documenting the construction of waka for the 1940 centenary of the Treaty of Waitangi. It uses footage shot between 1937 and 1940 by R.G.H Manley, and edited 50 years later by Annie Collins and director Merata Mita.
In 1937, in anticipation of the 1940 centennial celebrations, MÃÂori leader Princess Te Puea commissioned seven waka taua (war canoes), in an attempt to recreate the legendary seven canoes of the MÃÂori migration, though only three were built due to funding shortages. Stills photographer R.G.H "Jim" Manley was asked to film the process, from the felling of massive trees to the maiden voyage. The filming also met financial hurdles and never entered post-production.
The waka named NgÃÂtokimatawhaorua was ultimately launched on Waitangi Day, 6 February 1940. It is launched every February and is housed at the Waitangi Treaty Grounds. The other two waka, Tumanako and Te Rangatahi, are located at Tà «rangawaewae and sail annually during the Tà «rangawaewae Regatta.
In 1983, the New Zealand Film Archive began restoring the footage. Merata Mita joined the project in August 1989, editing the film on location at Tà «rangawaewae Marae so that the materials could be handled with traditional blessing practices, and to allow elders originally present in the 1930s to advise. As the original film was almost completely silent, the soundtrack was created from scratch based on the remembrances of these elders.
Disagreements between Mita and the family of R.G.H Manley over the direction of the film came to a head after an early workprint screening, when family members took the workprint from the projection booth. A period of mediation occurred afterwards, though contention over the ownership of the original footage persists.
Mana Waka premiered at AucklandâÂÂs Civic Theatre on 21 January 1990. Its next public screening was twenty-one years later at the 2011 New Zealand International Film Festival. It was one of fifteen films chosen by the New Zealand Film Archive in 1995 to represent the countryâÂÂs most important cinematic heritage, in response to a UNESCO survey.