

I took this series of photographs of
tokotoko (walking sticks) at the opening of
Ngati Wheke's new whare tipuna at
Rapaki Marae in November. The men you see carrying
tokotoko at a
hui (meeting) or on a
marae (meeting place), are generally those recognised as orators, with an authority to speak (at the gathering).

The tokotoko is very much an object of beauty, symbolic of authority and status; and it is generally
decorated with carving that represents the owner's ancestry, or a legend. Historically it represented the history from which that status was derived and in former times, they were often notched with carvings which successive generations of owners used to help them recite their genealogy.


I can understand why so many owners consider a well-carved tokotoko a prized possession and an heirloom. Some of them are exquisitely and elaborately carved and rightly deserve to be passed down through the generations.