The Māori All Blacks players perform the haka, Toyota Stadium. Photo: Toshifumi Kitamura/Action Press
South Africa Rugby president Mark Alexander has revealed that plans are in place to welcome the Māori All Blacks next year, as well as formally apologise for historic exclusion during the country's apartheid era.
"We must also acknowledge that the injustice of apartheid extended beyond our borders. The Māori All Blacks-a team rich in heritage and pride-were denied the right to tour South Africa for decades, simply because they were not white. That exclusion was a stain on our history and it is long overdue that we confront it with humility and remorse," said Alexander this week, as reported by Cape Town-based journalist Mark Keohane.
"I am pleased to share that the South African Rugby Union is currently in discussion with our counterparts in New Zealand to host the Māori All Blacks for two matches on South African soil next season," said Alexander.
Gayton McKenzie (Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture of South Africa) and Mark Alexander (President of SA Rugby) during the Castle Lager Rugby Championship match between South Africa and Australia at DHL Stadium. Photo: Grant Pitcher/Gallo Images/Getty Images
"These games will not only be a celebration of rugby excellence-they will be a moment of reckoning, of recognition and of reconciliation. We intend to use this occasion to formally apologise for the discrimination they endured and to honour those who were excluded and marginalised here at home."
Alexander's remarks come one week out from the highly anticipated first test between the All Blacks and Springboks, but also as plans are being finalised for the All Blacks to tour South Africa in 2026. It will be their first full tour of any nation since their iconic series win over the Springboks in 1996. It is understood that the tour, which will be officially called 'The Greatest Rivalry', will involve the All Blacks playing three tests and five midweek games, with a fourth test to be held at Twickenham in London later in the year.
In a statement, NZ Rugby did not mention any specific involvement of the Māori All Blacks in the 2026 tour but said that they are "excited to share more details about the All Blacks and Springboks tours in the coming weeks alongside the South African Rugby Union. As a part of this, we are exploring opportunities for the Black Ferns to be involved."
A young Bryan Williams proved he was a force to be reckoned with on the field. Photo: Courtesy of Sir Bryan Williams
Māori and Pasifika players were barred from touring South Africa with the All Blacks in 1949 and 1960, with the 1970 and 1976 cohort that included Sir Bryan Williams and Sid Going infamously given 'honorary white' status under the apartheid regime's laws. There had been an earlier pre-apartheid tour in 1928, with Māori players excluded, however that was at the behest of the NZRFU (now NZ Rugby) for fear of upsetting the already deeply racially divided situation in South Africa at the time.
A then-New Zealand Māori side toured South Africa in 1994, the same year Nelson Mandela had been elected president and apartheid had been fully dismantled. The team's visit had been orchestrated by Alexander's predecessor Louis Luyt as a gesture of goodwill towards Mandela's new African National Congress government, amid escalating tensions at the time that saw South Africa on the brink of civil war.
Mandela and Luyt then played pivotal roles in the following year's Rugby World Cup, which saw the Springboks defeat the All Blacks in the final.