Marlborough Express - Weekend Express

Returning to mātauranga for healing

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Rongoā Māori expert Awhitia Mihaere (Ngāti Kahungunu), the chairperso­n of the ACC Rongoā Māori Advisory panel, shares her life experience­s and applied practices of rongoā, and what it means for ACC to be supporting the inaugural Rongoā Māori Conference in May. She talks about her deep roots in traditiona­l Māori healing, which began in early childhood at the side of her grandmothe­r.

Rongoā Māori (traditiona­l Māori healing) was our way of life. It was knowing how to apply her teachings to our own personal life.

Our first rongoā learning in the māra (garden) was kūmara – how to plant and how to harvest, and then to manaaki (share) with your whānau and hapū.

We applied the same tikanga practices to our moana (ocean) and ngahere (forest). My grandmothe­r taught me the different varieties of seaweeds and their uses. For example, which seaweed to apply to a bee sting or what to give for low iron count like our kina (sea urchins) or kūtai (mussels) along with pūhā (sowthistle) in a boil up.

My father experience­d injury and disability and so growing up we treated each moment as a rongoā learning, paying attention to the applicatio­n of rongoā taught to us by our mum. That included whitiwhiti kōrero (support and advice), mirimiri (bodywork) and romiromi (cellular memory healing).

Rongoā Māori was suppressed for so long, officially it was from 1907 through to the 1960s, but in my opinion, it took until 1998 to start to recover from that. In the past 10 years, we have been celebratin­g the resurgence of rongoā being reintroduc­ed back into our communitie­s,

The progressio­n for rongoā Māori in Aotearoa with the support of ACC has shifted from when my dad had his accident to a place of returning to our mātauranga (Māori knowledge and world view) to help heal our Māori communitie­s.

ACC has been offering rongoā Māori as a healing option since 2020 and the response shows there is a need for this healing in our communitie­s.

For rongoā practition­ers, the 2024 ACC Rongoā Māori Conference is significan­t. It is the first time we have seen a government agency acknowledg­e rongoā in this way, as a kaupapa that brings about wellbeing for our people.

Rongoā uplifts our wairua (spirit) and our mauri (life energy) and there certainly is an abundance of aroha (love) that is immersed in our practices.

We believe this conference will bring a great relationsh­ip in terms of honouring Te Tiriti o Waitangi and promoting

equity for tangata whenua.

We are looking forward to growing understand­ing of rongoā and being able to work alongside the medical fraternity because we haven’t really been able to do that before.

The upcoming conference signifies a milestone in promoting collaborat­ion with ACC and rongoā practition­ers and their communitie­s.

“Offering rongoā as a rehabilita­tion service is part of our continuing efforts to deliver equity for Māori,” ACC head of Māori health partnershi­ps Eldon Paea says.

As part of its commitment to growing access to and awareness of rongoā Māori across the health sector, ACC is supporting the inaugural Rongoā Māori Conference in Rotorua, on May 22 and 23.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? ACC rongoa Maori advisory panel chairperso­n and expert Awhitia Mihaere.
SUPPLIED ACC rongoa Maori advisory panel chairperso­n and expert Awhitia Mihaere.

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