The world changed overnight for Wairoa Māori Film Festival Director, Leo Koziol, when Cyclone Gabrielle ravaged his hometown of Nūhaka, Wairoa.
Places he had known and treasured were damaged – the streets around his home, the local school, the Māori language school, the new film festival office, and his Marae.
Now Leo is on a mission to restore his home, and has made his way to Wellington to find out how he can help Nūhaka and Wairoa.
He is currently staying with Wellington City Council Māori Arts Director Suzanne Tamaki, Leo is in Pōneke to help fundraise for the Mayoral Relief Fund and his flooded Marae, Kahungunu.
“All the carvings need to be cared for because you want to keep the original wood restoration. We need to take the panels off to restore them and try to repair any photos and books. The Marae was filled with precious taonga.”
His secondary mission is to restore archival footage from the Wairoa Film Festival, which includes videos used for Wellington City Council Film Nights, he says.
“Being the founder of the Wairoa Māori Film Festival, I had 20 years of archival DVD footage in my garage that was flooded and I’ve been able to dry and repair them. These films have been played across the country, even for film festivals in Wellington. If we had VHS tapes, we would’ve lost our history!”
When he thinks back to when the Cyclone hit Nūhaka, Leo says that the whole experience felt surreal.
“I found my father’s old transistor radio and spent all night listening to National Radio to figure out what was happening in the country. My garage had been flooded, but I didn’t know how bad it was.
“When the power came back on a couple of days later, I was able to watch the news on tv and I could see photos of Wairoa. I would say ‘that’s not Wairoa’. I couldn’t believe what I saw. You want to press rewind, but you can’t.”
When he was able to leave his home, he says half of the town was completely devastated.
“On the North side, a motel, bowling club, petrol station, Iwi Centre for Ngāti Kahungunu and the Māori language school where the new film festival office is were all flooded. It all looked so weird. We then had four days of sunshine, so everything dried out. Wairoa looked like a cowboy town,” Leo says.
He says the rural Nūhaka community came together in the first few days after the cyclone.
“The best thing for us was to be with our own people, look after each other and do what we could. The supermarkets were stripped bare and there were only things like onions left.”
“A Marae that wasn’t damaged opened their doors for the community. They went around getting as much food from damaged freezers and began cooking. They cooked for 24 hours. The fire station became a relief hub and we all spent our time there, being looked after by our neighbours.”
Wellington City Council has joined a Local Government Initiative called Adopt a Community to support cyclone-affected Councils and their communities.
Wellington has been paired with Wairoa District Council. You can donate to the Mayoral Relief Fund for Wairoa here.
Mayoral Relief Funds have been set up for Auckland, Tairāwhiti, Thames-Coromandel, Hawke’s Bay, Tararua, Wairarapa, Taranaki and Taupō regions. To find out more, visit the National Emergency Management Agency’s website.