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Tributes pour in for Jonah Lomu

Updated on: 29 November,2015 08:52 AM IST  | 
AFP |

Mourners turned up in large numbers for All Blacks farewell, some wearing traditional attire made of woven mats

Tributes pour in for Jonah Lomu

Jonah Lomu

Auckland: Thousands of people, some wearing traditional Tongan woven mats, gathered in Auckland on Saturday for a Pacific island farewell for late rugby legend Jonah Lomu.

Jonah Lomu
Jonah Lomu


Former All Blacks Tana Umaga and Michael Jones led mourners at the service which Queen Elizabeth II's representative in New Zealand, Governor General Jerry Mateparae, said was a celebration because "Jonah's life is worth celebrating".


Graceful Lomu
"He impressed us with his courage, his humility, his grace under pressure," Mateparae said of the blockbusting wing who is credited with revolutionising rugby and became the game's first global superstar. Lomu's career was cut short by a chronic kidney disease and he died unexpectedly at his Auckland home last week aged just 40, leaving a wife and two young sons.


The sudden death brought an outpouring of grief around the world, not only from rugby union teammates and rivals but also politicians, Hollywood personalities and sports stars. "His determination to use his influence and his mana (prestige) for the benefit of others was exemplary," Mataparae said.

A time for prayer: Jonah Lomu
A time for prayer: Jonah Lomu's widow Nadene (second from right) with his mother Hepi (extreme right) follow the casket carrying the All Blacks rugby legend's body during a memorial service at the Vodafone Events Centre in Auckland on Saturday. Pic/AFP

Ahead of Monday's public memorial at the spiritual home of New Zealand rugby — Auckland's Eden Park — the Pacific island communities gathered Saturday for a "family day" to pay a traditional tribute to Lomu who was of Tongan descent.

His widow Nadene and sons Dhyreille and Brayley — who were wearing All Black jerseys with the name Lomu and the number 11 on the back — led the mourners into the service. Hundreds of Pacific islanders, many wearing a ta'ovala — a mat wrapped around the waist, which is a traditional Tongan dress worn by men and women on special occasions — turned up for the service where former All Black captain Umaga said it was important to gather in South Auckland where Lomu was born.

"We come to pay our respects in the area and with the people he grew up with," Umaga said. Jones said the Pacific family day was an "intimate and beautiful part of the mourning and the healing". Manu Vatuvei, a star in the rival code rugby league, described Lomu as a special man. "When he played on the field he was a beast and no one could stop him but when he was off the field he was a gentle giant," he said.

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