Thirty years ago rugby league coaching legend Graham Lowe vowed to come back to Northland one day to help a region where he saw so much talent yet so much disadvantage and despair.
Yesterday he fulfilled that promise when he returned for the graduation of 10 young Ngawha Prison inmates who had completed his Lowie Foundation's education and sport programme, a first step towards getting jobs or studying on the outside. It was an emotional experience, Mr Lowe said.
"It warmed my heart like nothing before. I've sat in the coach's box at Wembley with 100,000 people in the stadium [when he coached Wigan] and I was no prouder than I was watching these 10 kids graduate," he said.
Ngawha Prison is the first in the country to trial the 21-week course, which combines numeracy and literacy with the basics of working as a fitness trainer. Graduates of the Lowie Foundation course gain a NorthTec level 2 Certificate in Foundation Studies.
Five of the graduates spoke at yesterday's ceremony, along with Mr Lowe and Sevens star Eric Rush.