Bay of Plenty Times

Call to put your love for te reo on record

Bay students joining bid to have 2 million Kiwis sharing Ma¯ ori Language Moment

- Emma Houpt

TThe resurgence of te reo is just so exciting. Arataki School principal Shelley Blakey

auranga students will come together tomorrow to celebrate te reo Ma¯ori despite restrictio­ns under alert level 2. This comes as the Ma¯ ori Language Commission is calling on all New Zealanders to take part in a Ma¯ori Language Moment in line with Te Wiki o te reo Ma¯ori.

The commission is hoping 2 million people will join the movement by speaking, singing and celebratin­g te reo at 12pm tomorrow.

Arataki School principal Shelley Blakey said the school was hoping to “ramp up” their involvemen­t in the initiative this year, however this had become tricky due to alert level 2 restrictio­ns.

All students were going to come together to sing waiata, however, classes now had to do it separately.

“We were hoping to do it all together, but of course we can’t because singing is a high-risk activity.

“Staff will take a video of the kids singing, and we will put it together and have it as a resource for families,” she said.

She said all New Zealanders should be taking part in this initiative.

“It is one of our official languages, and the resurgence of te reo is just so exciting. To be part of that in school is a real privilege.”

She considered the school was lucky to have a “really strong” bilingual unit, with four classrooms catering to roughly 100 students from all year groups.

“Our level of expertise in our school is phenomenal, we are really lucky to draw on that. Often the kids are the experts which is so amazing,” she said.

Celebratin­g Ma¯ori language week was “really important”, however

Blakey said the students’ learning would not differ much from other weeks.

“Celebratin­g it is an integral part of who we are as a school.”

“A lot of what we are doing next week is normal anyway. It is turning it into a celebratio­n.”

Ten-year-old Arataki School student Kurei Kaha Harawira, who would be getting involved tomorrow, said he felt “strong” when practising haka and kapa haka.

“I feel my ancestors in me, when I am doing my haka and kapa haka.

“I feel happy inside, and I hope my ancestors do. I want to step foot in where they were before.”

As of 2pm on Friday, there had been 7509 registrati­ons for the virtual event consisting of 1699 individual­s and 5874 organisati­ons in the Bay of Plenty.

Ma¯ori Language Commission chief executive Ngahiwi Apanui said te reo Ma¯ ori was still endangered and it needed to be protected.

“The same way we protect our people: because like our families, te reo is our taonga,” she said.

This year the commission was hoping to see 2 million New Zealanders join the movement.

“We also want to set the world record for people speaking and celebratin­g an endangered, indigenous language at the same time. Last year more than 1 million people joined us for our Ma¯ori Language Moment.”

Participan­ts would be able to celebrate te reo from wherever they were, in whatever way they wished.

And the commission would be registerin­g its world record attempt with the Guinness Book of World Records.

Ma¯ori Language Commission­er professor Rawinia Higgins said it took one generation to lose a language, and three to get it back.

“If we are to safeguard te reo we need 1 million speakers by 2040.

“A key contributo­r to the death of a language is societal attitudes.

“It is about us standing together as New Zealanders and saying we want to protect our language for future generation­s because te reo is the language of our nation.”

For more informatio­n, visit www. reomaori.co.nz

 ?? Photo / George Novak ?? Arataki School student 10-year-old Kurei Kaha Harawira.
Photo / George Novak Arataki School student 10-year-old Kurei Kaha Harawira.
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