Inmates at Ngawha prison's whakairo workshop have earned a national reputation for the quality of their work, and have undertaken numerous commissions, but perhaps nothing they have done in the past would surpass the replica of one of the amo (front post) of Manawanui Marae in Auckland, which the carvers handed over recently.
The new amo was formally blessed at a ceremony at Ngawha, and given into the care of the kaumātua of Manawanui Marae, Kohi Henare, before being transported to Auckland.
Manawanui Marae is part of Māori Mental Health Services, which operate under the umbrella of the Auckland District Health Board and the Waitematā District Health Boar.
The marae originally stood adjacent to the Mason Clinic, in Point Chevalier, Auckland, but was moved to its current site, opposite the Unitec Institute of Technology, in the early 2000s.
The carving of the replica amo was commissioned thanks to a long-standing relationship between Ngawha and the two DHBs' chief adviser tikanga, Dame Naida Glavish, as well as the kaumātua of the two DHBs.