Eight years ago, when a fledging Maketu Rotary club was establishing itself in the small village where Tamatekapua landed, little could they have imagined that the Kaimoana Festival they had created as their first major fundraising project would become one of the Bay of Plenty’s most popular annual summer events.
The Kaimoana Festival, now in its sixth year, was the vision of the club’s second president, Julie Crossley. She notes that “the first festival started with a roar and ended with a splash”. Ticket pre-sales had resulted in a “Sold Out” sign going up a few days before the event. And then on the day of the event, the heavens opened to deliver one of the heaviest rainstorms the village had seen. Nonetheless, many hearty Kiwi festival goers showed up and some had to have their cars pulled out of the mud before they could go home.
Undaunted, the Maketu Rotarians soon launched
into planning the next year’s festival, and the next, and the next. And this February the Maketu Kaimoana Festival
delivered its sixth “Celebration of Seafood”, this time to record crowds.
Locals often refer to their community as “Magic
Maketu”, and with good reason. With a
population of just 1,000 it is the home of several outstanding volunteer
organisations. These include a fire
brigade that was recently named New Zealand’s number one brigade, a sea rescue
unit that operates under the New Zealand
Coastguard umbrella and has responsibility for hundreds of square kilometers of
the bay, and a surf lifesaving club that engages many local youth and provides vital beach patrols during the summer
months.
These, and other community organisations become
part of the Kaimoana Festival from assisting with set-up, to providing first
aid on the day, to staffing the event,
to running stalls that generate funds for their own group. In the end they, and many other community
projects, share in the rewards.
Charles Peni, this year’s Kaimoana Festival
chairman and past club president, says that Maketu is filled with people who
embody Rotary’s motto of “Service Above
Self ”. He added, “so it is no
surprise that this tiny village can support a vibrant Rotary club of 30
members”.
But the magic of Maketu Rotary’s Kaimoana
Festival doesn’t stop with supporting the local community. The club has a policy that commits 10% of
every fundraising effort to The Rotary Foundation. This policy has resulted in making the club
one of the top annual Foundation contributors in District 9930. And, it has also inspired personal giving to
The Rotary Foundation by its members.
The 2013 Maketu Kaimoana Festival closed on a
high note with the crowd getting to its feet and dancing to the pulsating music
of the “Sunrise Rockers”. What made this
especially sweet was that the “Sunrise Rockers” are a top band composed of
members of the Rotorua Sunrise Rotary Club,
just an hour down the road from Maketu.
On the surface the Maketu Kaimoana Festival
appears to be all about seafood. But in
reality it’s all about people. It’s
about building a community and supporting
people who serve that community in a variety of ways. It’s about Rotarians who really rock, from collecting
tickets to belting it out on stage.
Related Links:
Click here to read about the behind-scenes aspects of promoting this event.