The National Library of New Zealand is hoping to connect Pasifika youth to their Polynesian voyaging history with the launch of an interactive education program.
As part of this, a four-metre long replica of a traditional double-hulled vaka has been created in partnership with the Victoria University School of Design and Innovation.
‘Whakaura’ was designed and constructed over the span of 18 months. The twin hulls were 3D printed with recycled and ocean plastics, and for the rest of the assembly, the team used reclaimed materials to promote an eco-friendly process.
The Okeanos Foundation for the Sea provided the university with the digital model of Cook Islands Vaka Te Au O Tonga as a blueprint for their design.
The vessel has been created as an educational tool to be taken into schools around New Zealand as a part of an immersive package for youth to connect to the Moana.
The library’s senior education specialist Tereora Crane is very passionate about sharing the rich indigenous knowledge of our ancestors with the next generation.
“This knowledge comes from our Pacific worlds and we are the guardians of it,” Crane said.
“If we are gifted with that we should be trying to give that to as many people in the Pacific as possible and for them to go ‘actually this is part of the history of where I live’, so they don’t grow up not knowing those stories and not knowing the richness of this part of the world.”
He aspires to inspire Aotearoa youth.
“That’s the privelege we have of being story tellers; to inspire, to agitate our young people to think about ‘well if this is in my backdrop how will I write the next chapter?'”
“[Because] if we cant inspire our young people about their culture and heritage, why would they care? Why would they, as the future guardians of that knowledge and cultural practises and science, why would they care about taking that forward?”