RÃÂnata Kawepà  Tama-ki-Hikurangi (? – 14 April 1888) was a New Zealand MÃÂori leader and missionary. Of MÃÂori descent, he identified with the NgÃÂi Te à ªpokoiri and NgÃÂti Kahungunu iwi. He was born in Taumata-o-he Pa, west of what would become Hastings, in Hawke's Bay, New Zealand.
As a young man in 1827, he was among the NgÃÂi Te à ªpokoiri forces besieged at the island fortress on Lake Rotoatara (near Te Aute) by a force of NgÃÂti Te WhatuiÃÂpiti and NgÃÂpuhi led by Te Pareihe. After a two-month siege, it became clear that the fortress was going to fall, and he proposed that some of the defenders hand themselves over as hostages to secure safe passage for the rest. When no one else volunteered, he went by himself, saying kia kawe au ki te pà  ("let me deliver myself up to the night!"), from which he took the name Kawepà Â.
As a prisoner, he was taken first to Manawatu and later to Auckland. William Colenso later brought him back to Hawke's Bay.
He established St John's Church at Omahu. A memorial for him and those who fought alongside him in battle was placed in the cemetery of St John's Church by the government; approved in 1928 and completed in 1929.