The photo of Hiroki Ogawa and Nicole Sutton used in the service sheet at their funeral.
It was a love story that ended so tragically on Mount Taranaki. I wish to post tributes to Hiroki and Nicole, and may their souls R.I.P, possibly near the summits of Fuji or Taranaki, or perhaps on both these similar shaped spiritual mountains.
Ice picks were held up in a guard of honour as the caskets of climbers Nicole Sutton and Hiroki Ogawa left a church in Auckland today following their joint funeral.
The couple were farewelled by about 600 people at Holy Trinity Cathedral in Parnell following their deaths on Mr Taranaki over Labour Weekend.
They had been climbing as part of the New Zealand Alpine Club's annual trip to the mountain.
The service was led by the Reverend Tony Surman, with tributes from Peter Cammell from the NZ Alpine Club and Professor Paul Kench from the University of Auckland.
Sutton family friend Gavin Hoare and a friend of the couple, Joe Fagan, also spoke at the service.
The service sheet for the funeral carried a photo of Ms Sutton and Dr Ogawa on a grassy hilltop, surrounded by mountains, A message from the families on the service sheet thanked the Taranaki and Ruapehu rescue services and police involved in the rescue operation.
The families also thanked Dr Ogawa's colleagues and students at the University of Auckland, and the Auckland section of the NZ Alpine Club.
Mount Taranaki or Mount Egmont
Geremy Hema Maori Kaumatua of Taranaki iwi had held a karakia for the couple and were now regarded as spiritually together, atop the maunga (peak).
A search and rescue party reached the pair early on the morning of Monday, October 28, but found Dr Ogawa already dead. Ms Sutton died before rescuers were able to get her off the mountain.Ms Sutton, 29, and Dr Ogawa, 31, died after being trapped sheltering in an ice trench near the summit for two nights in bad weather.
Their bodies were winched off by the Air Force the following day.
Dr Ogawa's parents arrived in New Zealand from Japan last week.
Family and friends hugged one another, and some came forward to lay sprigs of greenery on the caskets as they left the church under a guard of honour formed by ice picks.
Police are investigating the deaths on behalf of the coroner, and the New Zealand Alpine Club said this week it would independently review the trip.
Hiroki Ogawa and Nicole Sutton
A young couple who died atop Mt Taranak i were farewelled today in one of the biggest funerals held at Auckland Holy Trinity Cathedral.
Hiroki Ogawa, 31, and his girlfriend, Nicole Sutton, 30, died together in a snow cave on October 28 after being trapped by severe weather.
The couple had been planning to announce their engagement shortly, the service heard.
More than 3000 people gathered for the funeral in which the couple's simple caskets sat side by side as friends and family spoke.
"I thought there would be a good turnout and I have not been disappointed," the Rev Tony Surman said.
When the two-hour service ended the caskets were carried out under a guard of honour of ice-axes. Mourners placed sprigs of rosemary on the caskets.
Mt. Fujiama, Japan.
Nicole's father, Keith Sutton, told the congregation grief had struck the family before when 30 years ago he and wife Anna had lost a son, Jeremy.
"Anna and I have been here before ... At that time I was young and did not know much about life and reality."
He asked his wife if he spoke at that funeral.
"She doesn't know, I don't know." The family moved on and had been "lucky enough to have Nicole".
Sutton said many had contacted him after the tragedy, but he told them not to despair.
He said his daughter and Ogawa had celebrated the beauty of New Zealand and he had told others that if they did not follow them, it would be a waste.
"Do as much as you can do."
He said it had been "a real treat" to meet the Ogawa family.
"They are very fine people and they would have been wonderful in-laws."
The family greatly admired Hiroki and the influence he had on Nicole, he said.
"She seemed to calm, so collected, so measured."
Sutton said the funeral had been the first event his 90-year-old father had been unable to attend on health grounds.
But his father wrote to the Ogawa family, making the comparison between Taranaki and Mt Fuji.
Sutton said he told his father it was a beautiful and moving letter, and his father replied: "It was the hardest thing I have ever done in my life.’’
"And this is the hardest thing I have ever done in mine," Sutton said.
He said he was deeply moved by a poem by Mary Elizabeth Frye: "Do not stand at my grave and weep, I am not there. I do not sleep."
Ogawa graduated with a PhD from Auckland University this year. Much of his research, on waves and the impact on coasts, had been based around the Hokianga Harbour.
Geremy Hema from the area said Ogawa had been an adopted son of the iwi.
He said Taranaki iwi had held a karakia for the couple and were now regarded as spiritually together, atop the maunga (peak).
"Bitter is the departure, sweeter is the memory," Hema said.
Peter Cammell, of the Alpine Club, said the couple had loved and cared for each other.
"In those moments of extremis you had great love for each other."
Professor Paul Kench, the head of Auckland University’s environment school, said Ogawa was self-effacing and often began lectures saying, "I really have no idea what I am doing".
In reality, his academic work had "unusual significance" and his PhD would set a benchmark for years to come.
He was a "gifted and supportive educator", he said.
A friend of the couple, Joe Fagan, told the congregation Ogawa had become a legend at university and his name was known as something in geography.
"What is a Hiroki, the under-grads would ask," Fagan said.
His PhD took so long to do because he was always helping others and by the time he got his PhD he had virtually done two PhDs.
Ogawa's sister read, in Japanese, 1 Corinthians 13.
She said she had many stories of her brother, and invited people at a reception later to ask about them – "in Japanese".
Thanks to © Fairfax NZ News and APNZ for permission to run extracts from these two articles.
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