This powerful song of welcome echoes the women's karanga. It draws hosts and visitors together through a shared memory of loved ones who have been lost from the land, by both war and migration. While showing grief, the singers also express earth-shaking pride in the achievements of those who went away to the war, and later, those who have found a new way of life in the cities.
(Leader) Te Iwi E!! (All) E karanga e te iwi e Kua eke mai nei Kua eke mai nei ki runga te marae e
Mauria mai ra Mauria mai ra e nga mate o te motu e
Me nga tini roimata Me nga tini roimata e maringi whanui e
Titiro e nga iwi Titiro e nga iwi e nga mahi o te motu E hora atu nei e
Rū ana te whenua Rū ana te whenua, whatiwhati te moana
Aue te aroha Aue te aroha te mamae i ahau e.
Rū ana te whenua whatiwhati. Hei! | Our tribe is calling to the people who have just set foot on this marae
Bring with you the memories of all our dead and so many tears spilling forth nation-wide.
Look at our people working across the land spread out far and wide
Shaking is the ground, quivering is the sea. Oh, the love and the pain within me. The ground shakes and quivers, yeah! |