Master navigator spotlights Indigenous navigation systems
2 April 2026
Pacific navigation revealed as an embodied Indigenous science connecting body, ocean and stars.
Master navigator and carver Lamotrek Pairourou H. Larry Raigetal visited the University of Auckland to highlight traditional navigation systems.
Raigetal visiting from Guam spoke about ancestral navigation traditions, with Pacific Studies’ students from Pacific Embodied Practices on 24 March, ahead of a major upcoming exhibition at the New Zealand Maritime Museum | Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa.
The session at the Fale Pasifika introduced Pacific navigation as an embodied Indigenous science, that understands the human body as relationally connected to the ocean, stars, environment and community.
Raigetal’s teachings highlight the intellectual depth and precision of western Pacific voyaging knowledge systems, which enabled ocean travel across vast distances for generations.
“I have gone around the world, to exchange dialogue with young brilliant minds, to share with them the significance of who we are as Pacific Islanders. We are people of the ocean, who have lived on the land for centuries.”
A co-founder of Waa‘gey, a community based organisation preserving traditional Micronesian technologies and arts, addresses issues including climate change, urbanisation and economic vulnerability in remote outer islands. A master navigator and canoe carver from Lamotrek Atoll in the Federated States of Micronesia, he has spoken internationally about Micronesian navigation knowledge.
I have gone around the world, to exchange dialogue with young brilliant minds, sharing with them about the significance of who we are as Pacific Islanders. We are people of the ocean, who have lived on the land for centuries.
His visit coincides with preparations for the exhibition at the New Zealand Maritime Museum , opening in mid August 2026. The exhibition will centre Micronesian maritime knowledge, embodied technologies and intergenerational transmission of Indigenous expertise.
“I was invited to contribute to the exhibition, I brought a sail that was commissioned a decade ago. It’s a woven sail, but we almost lost the art and skills of weaving. Through the kindness of 95 year-old master weaver Maria Labusheilam, those skills were transferred to 20 other people, who were able to create it.”
The large woven pandanus sail from the Lamotrek voyaging canoe Lucky Star, will be a central feature of the exhibition; Raigetal emphasised how master weaver Maria Labusheilam was a exemplary example of women’s leadership to sustain voyaging and weaving traditions.
Pacific Studies Professional Teaching Fellow Julia Mageau Gray, teaches Pacific Embodied Practices at the University; she said the session affirmed Pacific knowledge systems that have long been marginalised within Western academic frameworks.
“It is incredibly important to have knowledge holders like Larry sharing how Pacific bodies are understood in relationship with the environment, the ocean and one another,” she said.
“What he shared shows how advanced our ancestors have always been. He spoke about organisations like NASA seeking validation for their own knowledge systems, while our grandmothers already knew those stars.”
Gray said centring Indigenous knowledge holders in universities and cultural institutions restores the authority and legitimacy of Pacific ways of knowing.
“When our knowledge holders are brought into these spaces, it raises our knowledge systems and restores the mana they deserve - not as alternatives, but as enduring and deeply intelligent sciences.”
Raigetal has previously served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Micronesian Department of Foreign Affairs, Director of the Yap State Department of Youth and Civic Affairs, and Chairman of the FSM National Banking Board.
He is currently an Assistant Professor at the University of Guam’s Micronesian Area Research Center. The visit reflects a growing recognition across Aotearoa of Pacific Indigenous knowledge as living, contemporary and internationally significant.