Former diplomat, magazine columnist, Pacific historian and poet Leilani
Tamu from Auckland will spend three months in Hawai‘i writing about “Cultural
Diplomacy” for a book of the same name, as recipient of the 2013 Fulbright-Creative
New Zealand Pacific Writer’s Residency.
A self-professed “pale-skinned, brown-eyed woman of Pacific Island
descent”, Leilani examined her mixed Samoan/Pākehā heritage in an opinion piece
for Spasifik magazine in mid-2012, while working as a New Zealand
diplomat to the Kingdom of Tonga. Soon after, she was offered a regular column
for Auckland’s Metro magazine. In the column “Cultural Diplomacy” she
has written about social and cultural issues including racism, unemployment,
home ownership and youth suicide.
On her exchange to the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa from September,
Leilani will work on a second book of poetry and prose, also entitled Cultural
Diplomacy (her first book of poetry is scheduled for release in early
2014). The book will include an exploration of the life of Princess Kaʻiulani,
a 19th century Hawaiian princess of mixed cultural heritage who was
heir to the throne before the monarchy was overthrown and the kingdom annexed
by the United States of America. Born to a Scottish father and educated in
England, Princess Kaʻiulani visited the US following the deposition of her aunt
as queen to fight for her kingdom and people, and is held up by Leilani as “a
great example of a Polynesian ancestor who effectively exercised the art of cultural
diplomacy in her time”. The book will also feature dialogue with contemporary
New Zealand and Hawaiian poets of mixed cultural heritage, discussing how their
heritage has shaped their work.
Leilani Tamu is the tenth recipient of the Fulbright-Creative New
Zealand Pacific Writer’s Residency, which was established in 2004 to develop
and foster closer links between the peoples of New Zealand and Hawai‘i, to
increase the profile and awareness of Pacific literature as an art form within
New Zealand, and to provide New Zealand writers of Pacific heritage with the
time and opportunity to undertake creative and professional development while
working on a new project. Previous writers from various genres to receive the
award have included filmmaker Sima Urale, poets Tusiata Avia and Daren Kamali,
and playwright Victor Rodger.
“This residency has offered great opportunities for many talented New
Zealand writers of Pacific heritage for over 10 years,” says Creative New
Zealand’s Pacific Arts Committee Chair Luamanuvao Winnie Laban. “Leilani’s
fascinating exploration into mixed cultural heritage through her rich and
varied career makes her a deserving recipient of this year’s residency. We are
excited to read the material she will produce.”
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