Wiremu "Wi" Pere (7 March 1837 â 9 December 1915), was a MÃÂori Member of Parliament in New Zealand. He represented Eastern MÃÂori in the House of Representatives from 1884 to 1887, and again from 1893 to 1905. Pere's strong criticism of the government's MÃÂori land policies and his involvement in the turbulent land wars in the 1860s and 1870s made him a revered MÃÂori leader and he was known throughout his career as a contentious debator and outstanding orator in the use of the MÃÂori language.
Wi Pere was born in 1837 at Tà «ranga (Gisborne), the son of English Poverty Bay trader Thomas Halbert and esteemed MÃÂori Rëria Mauaranui of Te WhÃÂnau-a-Kai hapà « of Te Aitanga-a-MÃÂhaki and Rongowhakaata. Pere was baptised William Halbert but commonly went by his Maori name, Wiremu Pere (William Bell).
From a young age Pere was noted for his shrewdness and identified by elders as having exceptional intelligence. He was raised largely under the tutelage of his mother and was schooled in tribal lore and genealogy by Te Aitanga-a-MÃÂhaki iwi elders of the Maraehinahina whare wÃÂnanga. This formed the basis of his authority in land dealings and Native Land Court proceedings from the 1870s.
The local Anglican mission also identified Pere as an emerging leader, and he became a member of the first standing committee of the Diocese of Waiapu.
In 1856, Pere married Arapera Matenga Toti at Waerenga-a-hika.
In 1865, as Pai Marire emissaries gained support in Poverty Bay and tensions grew amid local iwi, Wi Pere remained a government supporter and constant to his Anglican allegiance. However, despite this, he protested against the exile of Poverty Bay MÃÂori to the Chatham Islands, and strongly opposed the government's attempts to confiscate their land. Through his work in the Repudiation movement to support MÃÂori land owners, Pere became an important MÃÂori leader in the region and gained wide support in his first bid for Parliament in 1884.
Pere attracted much attention when he won the Eastern MÃÂori seat in the 1884 general election. As the fourth representative for the electorate, Pere spoke strongly against the Native Land Court's actions of giving land title to individuals, believing land should be owned by hapà « (sub-tribes) or whÃÂnau (family). He also joined the Kotahitanga movement and supported its efforts to establish a separate MÃÂori Parliament.
In both the 1887 and 1890 elections Pere lost the Eastern MÃÂori seat to James Carroll, who was opposed to the Kotahitanga separatist movement. When Carroll stood down in 1893 to contest the Gisborne (European) seat, Pere won Eastern Maori back as a member of the Liberal Party. He served a further four terms before losing the seat to ÃÂpirana Ngata in the 1905 general election.
Pere was appointed to the Legislative Council on 22 January 1907, where he was effectively the only MÃÂori member. By this time Pere had become a strong empire loyalist. He offered to lead a MÃÂori contingency to the South African war of 1899âÂÂ1902 and urged military training for all New Zealanders. Pere was unseated from the Legislative Council in 1912.
Wi Pere died on 9 December 1915, and was buried in a vault at Waerenga-a-Hika on 3 January 1916. In his eulogy Apirana Ngata remarked: "No man ever did more for his people...never was there a greater fighter for his race than Wi Pere".
As a final tribute to Wi Pere, a monument was erected along Reads Quay, Gisborne in 1919 to coincide with the return of MÃÂori troops from war. It was unveiled on 9 April 1919 by Hon. James Carroll.
His son, Albert, was a lawyer and Petone Borough Councillor from 1922 before his death, aged 30, in 1926. MÃÂori historian Rongowhakaata Pere Halbert was a grandson of Wi Pere.