Main picture: Te Karaka Area School principal Renae Savage stands outside her school the week of Cyclone Gabrielle. Inset: (Back) Pimia Wehi, Owen Roberts, Kaeyson Roberts, Dawn Jasmine Albert, Renae Savage. Front: Jahvarn Ruru and Riley Grayndler. Photo / James Pocock
Main picture: Te Karaka Area School principal Renae Savage stands outside her school the week of Cyclone Gabrielle. Inset: (Back) Pimia Wehi, Owen Roberts, Kaeyson Roberts, Dawn Jasmine Albert, Renae Savage. Front: Jahvarn Ruru and Riley Grayndler. Photo / James Pocock
Flood preparedness has become part of Te Karaka Area School’s curriculum - and the community is “ready to go” should a similar emergency to Cyclone Gabrielle strike.
Te Karaka was one of the hardest hit areas in Te Tairāwhiti during Cyclone Gabrielle.
Homes and marae were smashed and 64-year-old local farmer John Coates died in the floodwaters that engulfed his home early that Tuesday morning.
Across the region, more than 30 red stickers and about 200 yellow stickers were issued to homes hit, bridges were knocked out and the Gisborne water supply was critically damaged in the cyclone.
Te Karaka volunteer emergency response group Mahaki Tiaki Tangata response team lead Pimia Wehi says a lot has changed for the community since the cyclone two years ago.
“Everyone in our community were left with trauma, even families that didn’t have to move out of their homes.”
“Whether or not you lost a cat or anything, everyone was traumatised in some way.”
Local iwi Te Aitanga a Mahaki supports volunteer group Mahaki Tiaki Tangata.
Mahaki Tiaki Tangata set up an emergency hub after the cyclone so that, in future emergencies, residents do not have to head to the hills as they did during Cyclone Gabrielle.
“We are really grateful to our iwi that we’ve got our own evacuation point set up now, which was fully funded by our iwi,” she said.
“A crisis is a crisis, but there have been some golden nuggets that have come out of the last two years.”
“Number one would have to be how close-knit our community has become.”
“Anything, when the call comes out the community will come.”
Te Karaka Area School was the central support stop-off for the community during the cyclone and its aftermath, offering shelters, showers, food, water and welfare to people from Matawai to Kaitaratahi Bridge.
School principal Renae Savage said the time since the cyclone had been “a blur” and there was lingering anxiety among students and the community.
“But with all of the support that has come with the amazing iwi effort to look after them and our preparedness, we’ve been able to, as a school, build resilience in the students with all of those resources that have come.”
She said school whānau asked for resilience to natural disasters to become a part of the school curriculum after Cyclone Gabrielle, so they had focussed on it ever since.
“From the data and feedback from ākonga, they feel a lot more equipped and knowledgable.”
She said the community was “still in mourning” because the two local marae, Takipu and Rangatira marae, were still inaccessible.
“There are plans to have them rebuilt, but we really are still feeling the loss of those facilities without them available to us to, naturally, return and take our ākonga just down the road,” she said.
“In some respects, our school has remained as that kind of meeting place and marae space for a lot of community events.”
“We are very lucky to have, as a school community, people who have maintained their support and stayed close.”
She said this year was the best and most settled start they have had in a while since disruption from the Covid pandemic and the cyclone.
“In terms of where we have got to, we have had the best start to the year, the most settled, classrooms are in motion and students are keen and eager to learn.”
There are no specific commemorations of Cyclone Gabrielle planned in Te Karaka this year.
But she asked everyone celebrating Valentine’s Day this week to spare a thought for everyone across the entire country who was affected by Cyclone Gabrielle.