New Zealand remembers Jonah Lomu at memorial
Former and present All Blacks perform a haka as Jonah Lomu’s casket is carried out of Eden Park. (Reuters)
Former and present All Blacks perform a haka as Jonah Lomu’s casket is carried out of Eden Park. (Reuters)

A public memorial for New Zealand rugby great Jonah Lomu, who died last month at 40, has been held at Auckland’s Eden Park stadium.

The former All Black was capped 63 times by his country and was considered one of rugby’s first global superstars.

Thousands attended the service, which opened with a traditional Maori haka for Lomu, who was of Tongan descent.

He was diagnosed with a rare kidney condition in 1995, but the exact cause of death has not been established.

Doctors believe he died as a result of a blood clot that developed on the long flight back from the UK where he had recently been watching the Rugby World Cup with his wife and two young boys, reports the BBC’s Jon Donnison in Eden Park.

Many of those at the memorial were from New Zealand’s Pacific Island communities. A private family burial service will be held in Auckland on Tuesday.

This was a great send off for a great man. Perhaps not the attendance everyone was hoping for, but several thousand turned up at Eden Park to remember a legend of rugby union. The game’s first global superstar.

The ceremony opened with a haka, performed in traditional warrior costume with spine tingling intensity. The crowd heard tributes from people ranging from Queen Elizabeth II to Elton John.

Dozens of former All Blacks were there to pay their respects, among them Grant Fox, who told me: “The scary thing with Jonah was he was performing with a debilitating illness. Imagine what he could have done if he was 100% healthy.”

Former winger Eric Rush reduced the crowd to laughter and then tears as he addressed the gathering, remembering his dear friend.

It was a tough day for Jonah Lomu’s wife Nadene, who did her best to comfort the couple’s two young boys, Dyhreille and Brayley, both decked out in the famous number 11 shirt their father wore to such devastating effect.

The memorial opened with a haka, and powhiri welcome ritual. Jonah Lomu’s coffin was then carried into the stadium by pallbearers, including several former All Blacks.

Lomu’s wife Nadene followed, wearing a woven skirt – a traditional Tongan symbol of respect and mourning – accompanied by her two sons.

The tributes were led by World Rugby chairman Bernard Lapasset, who travelled from Paris for the memorial. He described Lomu as “a giant of a man (who) leaves a giant space in world rugby”.
“He will forever be a big part of rugby’s story,” he said.
New Zealand’s Prime Minister John Key recorded a video tribute in Paris, where he is attending the world climate conference.

“He proved that you can come from anywhere in New Zealand, in any background, and make it to the top,” he said in the message.
Jonah Lomu fought a nearly two-decade battle with kidney illness, which former All Blacks coach John Hart recounted, saying “he was a fighter until the very end”.

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