The Northland Age

And another one opens in Kaitaia

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Kaitaia’s third paataka kai was officially declared open last week.

The first, in North Rd, was led by Open the Curtains and Kaitaia Time Bank, the second, in Parkdale Crescent, by four-yearold July Thomas, while this one, in Bonnetts Rd, is the work of police/iwi family harm reduction initiative Whiria Te Muka and Te Ru¯ nanga o Te Rarawa.

Open the Curtains manager Trudy brown said the community kai movement that was sweeping A¯ otearoa was aimed at strengthen­ing local food security from the grassroots up. The Paataka Kai Open Street Pantries Movement originated in South Auckland but was now helping to nourish approximat­ely 2400 wha¯ nau at more than 60 locations, with another 120 pantries currently in constructi­on.

She hoped the movement would continue to thrive in Kaitaia, in same vein as community gardens.

“The concept is simple — take what you need, leave what you can,” Ms Brown said.

“We wanted to make food more accessible and available to wha¯ nau in need (via the North Road pantry). We did it because wha¯ nau told us that they were too whakama¯ [embarrasse­d] to go to WINZ and the foodbank. They felt judged,” she said.

“At the paataka they can access food and they don’t need to fill in forms, meet criteria or provide proof of income. They can just take what they need.”

The generosity of the community in continuing to fill the pantry had been overwhelmi­ng.

Bronwyn Hunt, Te Ru¯ nanga o Te Rarawa principal adviser, strategy and policy, said community paataka kai revived traditiona­l practices around gathering and sharing food resources.

“One of our ancestors was Waimiriran­gi, who was known to feed the people, so for us this is a way of celebratin­g as a culture, as an iwi, as a people. We don’t want to see people in need, so it’s about that whole sense of manaakitan­ga.”

The Bonnetts Rd paataka had several points of difference. The Kaitaia West community was encouraged to treat it as a communicat­ions hub, through the exchange of books and a community noticeboar­d.

“We’ve got books in there, acknowledg­ement that reading and the strength of words can be food for the soul as well,” Ms Hunt said. “We also see this as a means of promoting mahi or iwi services.”

Whiria Te Muka co-director Callie Corrigan said community tools such as paataka kai encouraged the initiative’s police partners to think and work differentl­y to strengthen community wellness.

“Kai has a role of nourishing wha¯ nau tinana and wairua, while reducing stress and promoting the values of koha and manaaki. This is one small way where we can support in the background as we all start to think differentl­y to solutions to mana tangata,” she said.

The Bonnetts Rd paataka was a collective effort by Whiria Te Muka kaipu¯ puri Tash Kopae, with Detective Dave Gemmell and Constable Justin Fleet constructi­ng the cupboard and Te Ru¯ nanga o Te Rarawa providing the first kai. Ms Kopae had picked up on the movement via social media and recruited her community networks, including her police partners, to make it happen.

“In terms of the police, it’s definitely out of the norm and a different way of supporting the community. It shows that we are human, we have heart and we’re Ma¯ ori,” Detective Gemmell said.

The team was now busy working community connection­s to keep it well stocked, while conversati­ons were beginning with local businesses about supporting the paataka as sustainabl­e resources.

Anyone who would like a pantry in their street should go to www.patakai.co.nz or www.facebook.com/groups/ openstreet­pantrys to sign up.

 ?? PICTURE / SUPPLIED ?? Kate Atkinson (left), Mike Te Wake, Tash Kopae, Bronwyn Hunt and Naomi Austen-Reid doing their bit to keep traditiona­l practices around kai alive in Kaitaia.
PICTURE / SUPPLIED Kate Atkinson (left), Mike Te Wake, Tash Kopae, Bronwyn Hunt and Naomi Austen-Reid doing their bit to keep traditiona­l practices around kai alive in Kaitaia.

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