Name
Cook Islands
Capital
Avarua
Official Languages
Cook Islands Maori (Rarotongan)
Maori
English
Continent
Oceania (Pacific)
Church Membership
1,912
Congregations
5 (0 Wards, 5 Branches)
Find a Church
Number of Missions
0
Operating Temples
0
Last Updated On 31 Dec 2024

For Journalist Use Only

Tania Torea
New Zealand
Phone: 64-21-547-768
Email

The first Latter-day Saint branch in the Cook Islands was organized in 1946. Over the decades that followed, Church members in the Cook Islands labored on the project of translating Latter-day Saint scriptures, including the Book of Mormon, into Cook Islands Māori.

History of the Church in the Cook Islands

Beginning in the 1940s, groups of Latter-day Saints began forming in the Cook Islands, with the first branch formed in Rarotonga on October 6, 1946. A flurry of activity ensued as the Saints worked hard to build Zion, from the publication of Te Reo Tika (The True Word), a Latter-day Saint periodical, to the establishment of Primaries in Avarua, Murienua, Black Rock, Nikao, and Tutakimoa. Manu Cummings and Temauiarii James Vahua Ezekiela labored for decades on the project of translating Latter-day Saint scriptures—including the Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price—into Cook Islands Māori.

Latter-day Saints worked to be contributing members of their local societies, holding joint activities with community groups such as the Akaroa Youth Club of Arorangi. They also gathered with each other to work on common projects, such as the work of the Aitutaki Branch to maintain the branch boat and raise funds for a branch trip to the temple in Hamilton, New Zealand. Branch members in Rarotonga regularly hosted groups of members from other islands who were en route to the temple in New Zealand.

Latter-day Saints have continued to serve in their communities, helping those living in poverty, assisting with disaster recovery, and protecting the natural environment. They have embodied the prophet Nephi’s exhortation to “press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all [humankind]” (2 Nephi 31:20).

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Notes
  • Britsch, Lanier. Unto the Islands of the Sea: A History of the Latter-day Saints in the Pacific. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1986.
  • Cook Islands Church History, 1914–2000. Church History Library, Salt Lake City.
  • Cook Island District Manuscript History and Historical Reports, 1970–1992. Church History Library, Salt Lake City.
  • Cook Islands Photographs, circa 1942–1947; 1990. Church History Library, Salt Lake City.
  • New Zealand Auckland Mission, Apr. 4, 1990. Cook Islands Missionary History. Church History Library, Salt Lake City.
  • Underwood, Grant. Pioneers in the Pacific: Memory, History, and Cultural Identity among the Latter-day Saints. Provo, Utah: BYU Religious Studies Center, 2005.

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Last Updated On 12 Oct 2025