Sonja Margaret Loveday Davies (née Vile; 11 November 1923 – 12 June 2005) was a New Zealand trade unionist, peace campaigner, and Member of Parliament. On 6 February 1987, Davies was the third appointee to the Order of New Zealand.

Early life

Sonja Vile was born in the Upper Hutt suburb of Wallaceville in 1923. Her mother was Gwladys Ilma Vile, a nurse,

Sonja Vile learned of her father's identity, Gerald Dempsey, when she was 20, but never made any contact. She had four different foster homes before her grandparents took her in, and they lived in Oamaru and Woodville. Aged seven, she went back to her mother in Wellington to live with her younger sister and her new step-father. The family moved to Dunedin, then Auckland, and, in 1939, back to Wellington. By this time, she also had a younger brother. The speeches by pacifists Ormond Burton and Archibald Barrington appealed to her social conscience but caused tension with her parents, and she consequently left home aged 16 supporting herself by work in bookshops. She later returned to Nelson to seek the Labour candidacy for the seat in a 1976 by-election, but was unsuccessful, finishing the second preference to grocer and Nelson City Councillor Mel Courtney.

Involvement in unions

Davies helped to found the Working Women's Council, and in 1974 she became the first female executive of the Federation of Labour.

Involvement in early childhood education

On 14 October 1963 Davies, as president of the Nelson Day Nurseries Committee, organised a meeting of centre staff and managers which resulted in the formation of the New Zealand Association of Childcare Centres. The overall aim was to provide support and staff training to centres in order to increase the quality of care and education for preschool children. Davies also believed that the national Association would be influential in lobbying the government would also help centres to lobby the government over impending childcare regulations.

Member of Parliament

Davies became the Labour MP for Pencarrow in 1987 and served two terms. In November 1990 she was appointed as Labour's spokesperson for Women's Affairs by Labour leader Mike Moore. She retired in 1993 and Trevor Mallard replaced her.

In 1990, Davies received the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal, and in 1993 she was awarded the New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal.

Davies died in Wellington in 2005.

Media

thumb|Plaque commemorating Davies

Her autobiography, Bread and Roses: Her Story, (), was turned into a film in 1994. Directed by Gaylene Preston, the film was also called Bread and Roses. A second volume of autobiography, Marching On () was published in 1997.

  • Bread and Roses (film, 1994) on IMDb

References

  • Sonya Davies in 1986 (photo)