Busby — Father of Aotearoaʻs voyaging community — passes away

May. 17, 2019

Contributed by Nadine Lagaso

Renowned Māori canoe-builder and master navigator Sir Hekenukumai Ngaiwi Busby has passed away. He will forever be celebrated as the father of Aotearoa’s voyaging community and the builder of the double-hulled canoe Te Aurere, which revived traditional navigation for Aotearoa in the same way Hōkūle‘a did for Hawai‘i, the Pacific and the world.

Uncle Hec – as he was affectionately known – was a guiding elder for the Kamehameha Schools ʻAha Moananuiākea Pacific Consortium, a group of organizations committed to cultural, social, and environmental engagement in the Pacific, the ancestral oceanic home of the Hawaiian people. Consortium members include the Polynesian Voyaging Society, Bishop Museum, and the University of Hawaiʻi System.

Upon hearing the news, Kamehameha Schools Executive Culture Officer Dr. Randie Fong and wife Jamie Fong – manager of the KS Ka‘iwakīloumoku Hawaiian Cultural Center – left Hawai‘i for Aotearoa to meet up with Master Navigator Nainoa Thompson and other members of the Pacific voyaging community, to support Busby’s whānau (‘ohana).

“As Jamie and I slowly entered Te Uri o Hina Marae in the dark of night, we could hear the ritual weeping of the elder women inviting us in to see our beloved Papa Hekenukumai lying in state,” Fong said. “Dozens of photos of departed elders covered the wall above him, from one end to the other, with one conspicuous image looking down with aloha – former KS Trustee Myron Pinky Thompson, Nainoa’s dad and the founder of Kaʻiwakīloumoku.

“For some 35 years, Uncle Hector embraced the Hawaiian tribe, Ngāti Ruawāhia, the extended family of Hōkūleʻa and Kamehameha Schools. KS students and staff were a part of the ceremonies when the Hōkūleʻa crew made its historical landfall in Waitangi in 1985 and have been caring for this precious cultural heritage ever since.

“Today, through a KS cultural partnership, his whare wānanga, Kupe Waka Centre at Aurere, has become as a sister center of our own Ka‘iwakīloumoku Hawaiian Cultural Center. Indigenous educational exchanges are increasing, and there is greater attention given to climate and the environment, especially our Pacific Ocean. With such engagements between Hawaiians, Māori, and other Polynesian and Pacific peoples on the rise, Uncle Hec now joins the brotherhood of Papa Mau Piailug and Pinky Thompson who serve as our ancestral guides as we navigate in this new and profound Pacific Era.”

Messages of aloha flooded social media upon news of Busby’s passing. Among them was a post by KS Cultural Specialist Lāiana Kanoa-Wong:  “One of the world’s greatest navigators has returned with our ancestors to be a guiding star amongst the heavens. Love U ‘Anakala Hec. May your legacy live on forever.”



Uncle Hec now joins the brotherhood of Papa Mau Piailug and Pinky Thompson who serve as our ancestral guides as we navigate in this new and profound Pacific Era.
Dr. Randie Fong, KS Executive Culture Officer