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

Victoria University of Wellington

Activities

Check out the record of activity from Victoria University of Wellington.
If you are part of this school you can contribute your content as well.

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We had a mean waiata tahi at Rā Makete (Māori Market Day) run by the āwhina team at Te Herenga Waka, Victoria University of Wellington.

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Why we need to listen to indigenous perspectives!

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This is an audio recording of Maia Martin Elwell (aged 9) and myself Sarah Hoskyns (music therapist and VUW lecturer) singing and playing Tai Aroha. I have been learning and sharing waiata with Maia when I baby sit over the years and we sing them when she is in the bath. We practised it and recorded it last night as Maia is a school today. I challenged my Master of Music therapy teaching group at Victoria University to learn and share a new waiata this week, and I thought I had better do so too. Maia is a lovely tuakana! Thank you! This is such great mahi.

Karakia and waiata at Te Kāuru - Ferrier Research Institute at Gracefield

It's important to our programme to honour Māori and other Indigenous approaches to music and healing. Music is such a connecting process, and learning waiata, and hearing others' stories (such as Waireti's with Ihirangaranga) helps us to understand how we can work more respectfully with music and therapeutic approaches in Aotearoa NZ as registered music therapists. Music therapy comes from arts-based, medical and psychodynamic roots; it is important that we embrace other ways of knowing. Hearing the words in te reo, and their meaning today was very revealing. We spent time today with the language and concepts of Ihirangaranga, and received a kawakawa leaf and the sounds of the special vibrational bowl and singing. We also learnt about our own gifts as musicians and how we might share these with others. We thought about our own Indigeneity. Thank you for the opportunity to join other te reo learners today. Kia kāha for the project! Arohanui from New Zealand School of Music - Te Kōkī, Te Herenga Waka, VUW. (The selfie is our class making poi last week on Zoom and in person - perhaps not the best shot, but everyone was there). Sorry the final image below is upside down, I tried reversing it, but it stayed upside down! )