ELIZABETH SMITHER was
born in New Plymouth in 1941 and has worked as a librarian there for
many years. The current Te Mata Poet Laureate (a biennial apointment),
she has published many collections of poetry, including The Lark
Quartet (Auckland University Press, 1999), which won the Montana
New Zealand Book Award for Poetry in 2000. Her work has appeared widely
in Australia, Britain and Canada.
Smither comments: Te
Whiti and Tohu is one of a series of short poems 12 little
poems about Parihaka, commissioned by the Wellington City Gallery
as part of the historic exhibition, Parihaka: the Art of Passive
Resistance, 26 August 2000 - 19 January 2001. I had previously
written a series called 7 Little Poems About Canada and I had
this in mind when I was asked to write something for the exhibition.
The number 12 was chosen because the bell at Te Whitis house
was rung 12 times to summon his followers, in honour of the 12 apostles.
The 12 little poems touch on a number of subjects, both Maori and
European, ancient and modern. Te Whiti and Tohu assembles
some of the odd synchronicities of the two leaders of Parihaka, who
lived in opposite and very European houses. In life and death, their
lives had many parallels.