The life and experiences of one of the most prominent pre-Treaty Maori travellers have provided rich material for a book.
Tuai: A Traveller in Two Worlds, written by Professor Alison Jones, from the University of Auckland, and Kuni Jenkins (Ngati Porou), a Professor in Education at Te Whare Wananga o Awanuiarangi, is the story of a remarkable young Maori, born about 1797, who actively contributed to European knowledge of Maori language and culture well before the Treaty of Waitangi.
To learn more about Pakeha society, and to entice settlers to the Bay of Islands, Tuai lived among Pakeha overseas. He worked as a whaler in 1812, and, while in Australia in 1813, taught Thomas Kendall, who was to become New Zealand's first school teacher, to speak Maori, assisting him in compiling the first teaching book written in te reo.
He then travelled to England, where he witnessed the Industrial Revolution, visiting factories in Shropshire, and becoming a guest at high society dinners in London. With his lively travelling companion Titere, he attended fashionable gatherings and sat for his portrait.
On his return to the Bay of Islands in 1820 he found work as an interpreter for British naval timber expeditions, and as an instructor of French scientists seeking knowledge of the Maori people.