Share how you celebrated

Share what you did for Te Wiki o te Reo Māori 2023. This will go on to become a showcase of how we celebrate te reo as a nation.

Share your moment

Imogen

Imogen Wara

Te Wiki te Reo Māori 2023 pledge

Ako | Learn

To celebrate te wiki o te reo Māori, and te wā tuku reo Māori, I am going to do a karakia before dinner every night for all of September. I am also challenging myself to do a video for Consumer's social media where I teach a common consumer-related phrase in te reo Māori. For a few weeks I have been learning some kupu casually with friends and practicing these, along with some phrases. I have also been working in a Māori advisory group at work to help us become a stronger, more diverse and representative organisation. Plus, I am in a waiata group at work - which is a highlight for me!

11 people took part in this event

Groups Imogen is connected with:

Individual profile pages show some of the contributions you make to the Māori language movement. You can make your own profile page and share your Māori language journey.

Imogen

Imogen has taken part in:

Share your why
Te Wiki 2023

Activities

We celebrated Te Wā Tuku Reo Māori by singing and practicing waiata in the kīhini at work for the whole office to hear. We sung "Tai Aroha" and "Purea Nei" - two songs we have been practicing, and built up some more confidence with "Ka Pioioi" and "Tōia Mai Te Waka Nei. " Kia kaha te reo Māori! !

Kia ora koutou! It is important to me (Ngāpuhi, Te Āti Awa) because I see the way colonisation, assimilation and racism have harmed my people, specifically through my Koro. He grew up beaten for speaking te reo, he grew up with negative feelings towards his people because of the prevalent propaganda/scapegoating - he rejected his culture. I never learnt te reo growing up because my father never learnt te reo, because my Koro refused to teach it to his children out of fear of the negative impacts that knowledge and association could have on his whanau. I want to learn te reo Māori to fight back against the efforts to erase it and us. I took a 101 class at university, and when I went home to Rotorua I did a mihimihi for my Koro. He was amazed I had learnt it at uni. He couldn't believe that it would be upheld and celebrated in that way. It is important we all continue to learn and strive to do better because it is not enough to not be racist, we must be anti-racist. It is important because Māori are tangata whenua, we are the people of Aotearoa, to live here is to be visitors, we must respect te reo Māori and te ao Māori (they come hand-in-hand). I am practicing karakia every day for Te Wiki o te Reo Māori. I hope to continue with this and more beyond tēnei week. I hope you are challenging yourselves too. Karawhiua!