Pa Ropata - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 25 May 2023 21:02:57 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Pa Ropata - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 'Pa Ropata' McGowan awarded prestigious Waikato University medal https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/05/25/pa-ropata-mcgowan-waikato-university-medal/ Thu, 25 May 2023 06:00:50 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=159293 Pa Ropata McGowan

A lifetime's service to healing the land has seen Waikato University honour Tauranga Catholic, Rob McGowan with a prestigious award. Known to many as 'Pa Ropata', McGowan is this year's University of Waikato Medal recipient. The award recognises community service at a local or regional level. "Rob has made a significant and sustained contribution to Read more

‘Pa Ropata' McGowan awarded prestigious Waikato University medal... Read more]]>
A lifetime's service to healing the land has seen Waikato University honour Tauranga Catholic, Rob McGowan with a prestigious award.

Known to many as 'Pa Ropata', McGowan is this year's University of Waikato Medal recipient.

The award recognises community service at a local or regional level.

"Rob has made a significant and sustained contribution to regenerating degraded land and streams and to educating others in protecting Aotearoa's indigenous ecosystems," said Vice-Chancellor Professor Neil Quigley.

"For his long-standing contributions, I am very pleased to award him the University of Waikato Medal."

McGovern has spent his career "helping regenerate our biodiversity and educating others about our native ecosystems and how to protect them," Professor Alister Jones, representing Quigley, said at the award ceremony.

Learning about healing

McGowan wants all New Zealanders to be more connected to the land - the trees, plants, birds and animals. It's been his mission for decades.

Now more than ever, we need to pay attention to what we're doing to Mother Earth, he says.

"Heal the land, and you heal the people." He's known that since he was a nipper.

His Dalmatian immigrant mother used traditional plants and herbs for wellness and well-being. Watching her sparked his lifetime interest in the New Zealand bush and healing.

It also drew him to treat the whole person, the physical, mental and spiritual (wairua).

McGowan's first vocation as a priest also contributed to his career as a healer.

When the Catholic church sent him to Whanganui to learn te reo, with support from local Maori, McGowan was able to hone his skills in traditional Maori medicine.

While he could identify and name many plants, it took a while to "join the dots", and understand and learn Maori concepts involving mauri (life force) tikanga, wairua and rongoa.

"It's not just about fixing the sick, it's about giving them hope, and they will learn to be well," he says.

Service to others

Serving people and healing the land encapsulates McGovern's life's work to date. He

  • is a Maori health strategy consultant for the Bay of Plenty District Health Board
  • travels the country training people in rongoa Maori. He struggles to keep up with the hunger for the knowledge, but he is glad as it's "meeting people's needs," he says.
  • is a co-founding member of Tane's Tree Trust (1999)
  • is a long-standing member of DOCs Nga Whenua Rahui unit, protecting indigenous ecosystems on Maori-owned land
  • has spent 30 years teaching rongoa Maori
  • teaches people how to find the plants they need in the bush and collect them without damaging the plant
  • teaches rongoa Maori tikanga
  • planted a rongoa garden at home to help students learn plant identification
  • helps run a small nursery for the Waitao Landcare Group.
  • has written Rongoa Maori - a Practical Guide to Traditional Maori Medicine
  • is a former chair of the Bay of Plenty Conservation Board, the Kaimai-Mamaku Catchments Forum founding chair and a New Zealand Association of Medical Herbalists life member
  • championed Tiwaiwaka, six principles which create a philosophy for our approach to life and restoration of our natural world.

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‘Pa Ropata' McGowan awarded prestigious Waikato University medal]]>
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