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'We are still anti-vaccination': Destiny Church defends taking Covid grants

Author
Joseph Los'e,
Publish Date
Wed, 2 Apr 2025, 4:37pm
Destiny church leaders Brian and Hannah Tamaki. The anti-vaccine pair claimed $40,000 for their church in government grants for Covid-19 awareness. Photo / Sylvie Whinray
Destiny church leaders Brian and Hannah Tamaki. The anti-vaccine pair claimed $40,000 for their church in government grants for Covid-19 awareness. Photo / Sylvie Whinray

'We are still anti-vaccination': Destiny Church defends taking Covid grants

Author
Joseph Los'e,
Publish Date
Wed, 2 Apr 2025, 4:37pm
  • Destiny Church received $40,000 and preparedness grants from the Government in April 2020.
  • The Ministry of Social Development grants were aimed at community resilience during the pandemic.
  • Hannah Tamaki says multiple churches received similar grants, not just Destiny.

Destiny Church has defended claiming tens of thousands of dollars of Government money for Covid-19 preparedness despite its stand against lockdown and mass vaccinations.

Destiny Church pastor Hannah Tamaki has confirmed the church received a $5000 grant each for eight Destiny branches.

鈥淎cross the Destiny Churches, we received $40,000, and we were thankful that the money was given to help the community, and not to Brian and Hannah Tamaki鈥檚 pockets,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e can account for where every dollar went, and we are still anti-vaccination.鈥

Destiny Church leader Brian Tamaki at a Covid-19 lockdown and vaccination protest at Auckland Domain in October 2021. Photo / Brett Phibbs
Destiny Church leader Brian Tamaki at a Covid-19 lockdown and vaccination protest at Auckland Domain in October 2021. Photo / Brett Phibbs

鈥淭here were quite a few churches 鈥 not just Destiny Churches 鈥 who received grants,鈥 Tamaki told the Herald.

She said the money was used to boost food parcel packs with bread and milk.

Tamaki said all the money went back into the community.

鈥淲e distributed hundreds and hundreds of boxes of food parcels, and I鈥檝e got the pictures to prove it,鈥 she said.

鈥淭he Government deliberately put a piggy bank out there [the grants] knowing full well we were the only leaders speaking out against the vaccine.鈥

The Covid-19 grants came with a requirement for Destiny Church to report back on how the money was spent.

Stuff has reported it asked the ministry for copies of the reports from Destiny Church and learned they do not exist.

Brian Tamaki at a Man Up event in 2020. In March police stopped referring people to the programme. Photo / Doug Sherring
Brian Tamaki at a Man Up event in 2020. In March police stopped referring people to the programme. Photo / Doug Sherring

鈥淚n both contexts, the urgency and speed in which the ministry was expected to respond outweighed standard reporting requirements. Instead, in these situations, we worked collaboratively with our regions utilising their knowledge and existing relationships with community groups,鈥 community programmes manager Serena Curtis said in a statement to Stuff.

Hannah Tamaki told the Herald the ministry never pursued reports.

Police announced in March this year that it would no longer refer people to Destiny-affiliated programmes, including Man Up, following a violent protest at a West Auckland Pride event.

Tamaki said Man Up would survive without police referrals, which 鈥渁mounted to a minuscule number anyway鈥.

鈥淲e will continue to fund the Man Up programme ... ourselves,鈥 Tamaki said.

鈥淲ho needs the Government money, anyway?鈥

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