The Press

Come on Simon, put your best foot forward

- Joel Maxwell

I think I’ve ever had over a high achiever.

So here is my challenge to Bridges: chuck it in too, if only for a year. Don’t wait – do it now, and you can go back to politics with a good, strong foundation in your language.

I know, it sounds like a joke. But it is a serious question for all Ma¯ ori. Is anything more important than the fight to save te reo?

The language is in an existentia­l crisis. The number of proficient speakers is low and declining. We can’t get out of the death-dive by having a nation of people who can only say ‘‘Kia ora’’, count to 10-ish and point at colours and identify most of them.

Te reo Ma¯ ori demands something more, which is time. As work closes in around us, with responsibi­lities to our families, we think there is always something more important on which to spend our time; muttering to ourselves that we will do something, eventually, about the unfinished business of becoming our true self.

And it’s not even our fault we face a choice. We didn’t have a choice in learning Pa¯ keha¯ . The mistreatme­nt of te reo Ma¯ ori over hundreds of years by later arrivals has boxed us in when it comes to our own language’s survival. And I don’t say all of this to shame Bridges or any other

Ma¯ ori. Learning te reo properly is, in my experience, just a way to feel a lot better.

Anyway, when I talk about the demand for time, I mean genuinely setting aside the dazzle of adult ambitions and schemes – getting a promotion, making more money, yup, even running the country – and not succumbing to the complicati­ons of disentangl­ement from everyday life.

I see this strength in the other students at the wa¯ nanga where I study – a group of people who work so hard to learn te reo around life’s demands, families, jobs, other study, that it makes my head spin. (It seems I spend a lot of my life watching other people working hard.)

Anyway, I wish I had something reassuring to say about time. I’ve only recently started treating its passage with the seriousnes­s it deserves. Maybe maturity, which can happen at any age, is the act of not being frivolous with time. My point is that, while time is happening, you should try to cram in some important stuff.

Bridges can run all he wants towards Pa¯ keha¯ high achievemen­t, certainly what some might think of as the important stuff; but in the end it’s just another wall. The questions of power and policy eat up time, but he can’t escape his own heart. No Ma¯ ori can.

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