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词条 New Zealand (Māori) Pioneer Battalion
释义

  1. Origins

     Recruitment 

  2. Active Service

     Gallipoli Campaign  Service on the Western Front  Post-War 

  3. References

{{Infobox military unit
|unit_name=New Zealand (Māori) Pioneer Battalion
| image= Soldiers on the anti-aircraft guard of the New Zealand Pioneer Maori Battalion camp, Bayencourt, France.jpg
| image_size = 300
|caption=Soldiers on the anti-aircraft guard of the New Zealand Pioneer Maori Battalion camp, Bayencourt, France
|dates=1915–1919
|country= {{flag|New Zealand}}
|allegiance=
|branch= New Zealand Military Forces
|type=Pioneers
|role=
|size=~900 personnel
|command_structure= New Zealand Division
|garrison=
|garrison_label=
|nickname=
|motto=
|colors=
|colors_label=
|march=
|mascot=
|equipment=
|equipment_label=
|battles=First World War
  • Gallipoli
  • Western Front

|anniversaries=
|decorations=
|battle_honours=
|disbanded=1919
|commander1=
|commander1_label=
|commander2=
|commander2_label=
|commander3=
|commander3_label=
|notable_commanders= George Augustus King
|identification_symbol=
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}}

The New Zealand (Māori) Pioneer Battalion, or Native Contingent and Pioneer Battalion, was a battalion of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force that served during World War I. The battalion was first raised in 1915 and served at Gallipoli and the Western Front, primarily as pioneers.[1] "By the end of the war, 2227 Maori and 458 Pacific Islanders had served in what became known as the Maori Pioneer Battalion. Of these, 336 died on active service and 734 were wounded. Other Maori enlisted (and died) in other battalions as well."

Origins

Recruitment

When the First World War broke out, Māori leaders responded in various ways. Some, such as Rua Kenana Hepetipa, maintained total opposition to Māori enlistment. Others such as Āpirana Ngata, Paraire Tomoana, and Maui Pomare, were in favour of Māori enlistment and organised recruitment drives, particularly in the Waikato region of Ngāti Maniapoto and the East Coast Ngāti Porou region. Their recruitment campaign was particularly successful in Ngāti Porou, which enlisted enough men to form its own company in the battalion. Some companies were also supplemented by recruits from the Cook Islands and Niue.

By 1916 the battalion was in desperate need of reinforcements. As part of the drive to recruit more soldiers, the song Te Ope Tuatahi was composed by Āpirana Ngata. It became famous during the First World War and was adopted as the anthem of the battalion. In 1917, again in need of reinforcements, Paraire Tomoana composed an additional verse to the song, specifically encouraging enlistment in Ngāti Kahungunu, and other eastern regions of the North Island.[2]

Te ope tuatahi

No Aotearoa

No Te Waipounamu

No nga tai e wha


Ko koutou ena

E nga rau e rima

Te Hokowhitu toa

A Tumatauenga


I hinga ka Ihipa

Ki Karipori ra ia

E ngau nei te aroha

Me te mamae


Te ope tuarua

No Mahaki rawa

Na Hauiti koe

Na Porourangi


I haere ai Henare

Me to wiwi

I patu ki te pakanga

Ki Paranihi ra ia


Ko wai he morehu

Hei kawe korero

Ki te iwi nui e

E taukuri nei?

The first contingent was

from throughout New Zealand,

including the South Island;

they were from the four tides.


You there

the five hundred

the brave Battalion

of angry-eyed Tu.


Some of you have fallen in Egypt,

some in Gallipoli.

Love gnaws within us

and pain also.


The second echelon was

from around Gisborne,

from Tolaga Bay,

from the East Coast.


Farewell, O Henare,

and your 'clump of rushes'

who fell while fighting

in France.


Who will survive there

to bring the story back

to all the people

in sorrow bowed?

Te ope tuaiwa

No Te Arawa

No Te Tairawhiti

No Kahungunu


E haere ana au

Ki runga o Wiwi

Ki reira au nei

E tangi ai


Me mihi kau atu

I te nuku o te whenua

He konei ra e

E te tau pumau

The ninth contingent

is from near Rotorua,

from near Gisborne,

and from Hawke's Bay.


And now I am going

to the conflict of the Frenchmen

and there will I weep.

I salute you as I disappear

out of sight of the land.

Goodbye

my own true love.

Te Ope Tuatahi - Recruitment Song
Ngata's 1916 verses (Māori) Ngata's 1916 verses (English) Tomoana's 1917 verse (Māori) Tomoana's 1917 verse (English)

After their initial enlistment, recruits were organised into their respective companies and undertook basic training at Narrow Neck camp in Auckland.

Active Service

Gallipoli Campaign

The battalion first departed New Zealand in February 1915 aboard the SS Warrimoo, arriving in March for further training in Egypt. Despite requests made to Major-General Alexander Godley by New Zealand Minister of Defence James Allen and Māori MPs Āpirana Ngata and Maui Pomare, the battalion was not deployed to Gallipoli with the first invasion force in April 1915. Instead it was kept in reserve and placed on garrison duty on the island of Malta, where further training was undertaken. However, increasing casualties among the Anzac forces at Gallipoli led to the deployment of the 461 man battalion. The battalion arrived at Anzac Cove on 3 July 1915. Here they joined the New Zealand Mounted Rifles and were deployed as infantry soldiers. In 1917, the battalion was renamed the New Zealand Maori (Pioneer) Battalion.[3] After the Gallipoli there was considerable criticism of three officers of the Māori Pioneers, who were charged with desertion in the face of the enemy. Godley sent them home and broke up the Māori force when it was sent to France.[4] In France the Māori troops were interspersed with troops from the Otago Mounted Rifles Regiment who were adapted into the pioneer role after suffering many casualties at Gallipoli.

Service on the Western Front

It was intended that the battalion would be broken up and serve as reinforcement for other New Zealand units on the Western Front. However, after a short time the unit was reunited and served the rest of the war as pioneers digging trenches and drains, doing farm work, laying railway lines, erecting wire entanglements, burying artillery cables and building a cinema called "Kapai Theatre".[5] Much of the time the soldiers were engaged in making support or communication trenches well behind the front lines. When they had to work closer to the front they usually worked at night.

During the winter months of 1916 the pioneers were well behind the front lines in comfortable billets where they were able to use local cafes and hotels, and socialise with French civilians. Often during these times they were able to play rugby against other military teams. In letters home they praised the French beer which was very cheap, and the good quality champagne.[6] They had time to observe French farmers and those soldiers with a farming background made critical comments about the backward French methods.[7] Although leave was rare most soldiers had a chance to visit England and Scotland to take in the sights. They had the opportunity to visit tourist attractions in London.[8] The war diaries of the battalion say casualties were well below the rate for the NZ infantry Division,[9] but this was due to their service being primarily behind the lines. On at least one occasion the battalion was used to launch stealthy attacks on German trenches, armed with bayonets and patu.

In late August 1916 the battalion was engaged at the Somme, and began work on an 8 kilometre communication trail known as 'Turk Lane.' At Messines Ridge, the battalion suffered 155 casualties, including 17 deaths. In December 1916, 43 Māori soldiers from the Māori Pioneer Battalion joined the New Zealand Tunnelling Company in the lead-up to the Battle of Arras.[10] In 1917 the

remnants of the Otago Mounted Rifles Regiment, which made up 50 per cent of the battalion's remaining strength, was replaced by newly arrived Māori reinforcements. Around the same time a contingent of 150 Niue Islanders was sent home after failing to adapt to the conditions in Western Europe.[11] The last reinforcements was predominantly composed of Cook Islanders, and most were sent to join the Rarotongan company in the Palestine campaign. At the conclusion of the war the battalion was involved in an unpleasant incident when a group of Māori soldiers, possibly suffering from battle fatigue, started shooting in a rest camp. When an officer was sent to investigate he was shot.

Post-War

After the war, the battalion was the only battalion of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force to return home as a formed body and toured throughout the country. Since the war, many Māori communities have built memorials for the battalion at their respective marae.

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/war/maori-units-nzef|title=Maori Units of the NZEF|work=NZHistory, New Zealand history online|accessdate=26 November 2015}}
2. ^{{DNZB|Ballara|Angela|3t38|Tomoana, Paraire Henare - Biography|18 September 2014}}
3. ^{{cite book|title=NZEF Gradation List|date=December 1917|publisher=New Zealand Expeditionary Force|location=London}}
4. ^New Zealand History on line. Maori Pioneer Battalion.
5. ^The last Maopo. p 59. p 71. p 87. p 109 T. Simpson. Oratia Media. 2014.
6. ^The Last Maopo. p 47. p 71. p 111. T. Simpson. Oratia Media 2014.
7. ^T. Simpson. p 77.
8. ^T. Simpson p 86-87.
9. ^T. Simpson p 108.
10. ^{{cite web|last=Byledbal|first=Anthony|title=New Zealand Tunnelling Company: Chronology|url=http://www.nztunnellers.com/history/chronology.html|accessdate=5 July 2015|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150706180059/http://www.nztunnellers.com/history/chronology.html|archivedate=6 July 2015|df=dmy-all}}
11. ^The Last Maopo .T. Simpson.
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2011}}{{DEFAULTSORT:New Zealand (Maori) Pioneer Battalion}}

5 : Military units and formations of the New Zealand Army|Military units and formations established in 1915|Military units and formations disestablished in 1919|Māori history|Māori in the military

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