Te pae kōrero | Our why

There are many things that define New Zealanders and connect us to our home: and te reo Māori is one of them.

Everyone has their own reasons for wanting to learn te reo and see it become normalised and spoken nationwide. Explore them below and share your favourites to inspire others to get involved.


Add your 'why'

Because I am Māori and I work in the Māori freshwater space. I am learning te reo as part of my professional as well as my personal development, and I am committed to teaching my son as well.

Having pride in one of our official languages of Aoteoroa. Kia kaha.

Recognising that the Maori language is the language and culture of the Country I live in. Knowing a language and its culture is important and better define me as an Aotearoa citizen.

The Reo is a part of who I am, it is our history, it is the first language for our nation

I want to learn more te reo and really like this idea.

Because we need to enhance Te Reo Maori more in our country.

Sir James Henare- the language is the core of our Māori culture and mana. If the language dies as some predict what do we have left to us? Then I ask our own people, who are we? Our Māori language, as far as our people are concerned, is the very soul of the Māori people. What does it profit a man to gain the whole world but suffer the loss of his own soul? Even if we gain the world, to be monolingual, a Japanese once said, is to know only one universe. Ka tau ka pai.

I am taking part because I want to make a change. I am an 19 year old university student here at otago - originally I come from small town from the North Island. Since coming to university, I have been facing an identity crisis and have realized that there is no shame in being Maori. I want to be involved with my culture and what better way to start by learning my language. I have signed up for te reo classes - and hope to be fluent enough to teach my kids some day.

Hei whakanuia i tōku reo, i tōku tuakiri

WE want to encourage our tamariki to learn maori and be part of a movement. Work towards making Te Reo Maori strong in the classroom and at home.

Because I was not brought up with the reo and am a grandmother, great grandmother and no longer want to feel whakama for not knowing or understanding when my mokopuna speak Te Reo around me. . . I want to know embrace and feel proud to be Maori and feel it's timely now that I'm working for a Maori kaupapa.

The best way to preserve our beautiful indigenous languages is to learn it and use it, every day.

To be apart of the kaupapa to celebrate our language

Ki Te Ako tonu i Te reo maori

It's an important part of calling Aotearoa home and, as a Pakeha, it helps me to connect to, respect and appreciate Maori and their culture.

To help them celebrate maori

I've recently started to learn te reo and have only just realised how much this means to my sense of being a New Zealander

it is important to me to take part as i am of Maori decent and I have a passion for all tikanga and Kawa i roro i te ao Maori

Te Reo Maori is a taonga and a beautiful gift to be honoured. It is a passion of mine to learn and be fluent. I am still at a beginner/intermedaiate stage, and just need to commit! !

Me akona i te reo Māori i roto i Aotearoa!

To actively participate in being a New Zealander

Just keen to learn

Because I am Maori and we need to celebrate that every day not just one week of the year :)

To pass on my knowlegde to my son make sure hes grows up with the same guildlines and respect for his culture.

I've very proud to be a New Zealander and learning about Māori culture (of which te reo is key) is an important part of understanding what it is to be a New Zealander. Also, there are significant inequities between Māori and Pākehā, and learning more about Māori culture is an important step in trying to understand how to help.

This is important as it is part of my culture and more importantly a recognised language of our country as well as being proud to be Maori.

Because as a Maori. I should know more than I do.

We are in partnership with Te tiriti O Waitangi , it is important for it to be a art of our curriculum and show our Maori students who they are is important, their language is important

To whakanui the reo. To further my goal to learn more reo and more waiata.

Doing my part to ensure our Ao survives for our mokopuna.

I have the time now to learn.

Kia whakanuia te Reo Māori!

I am maori women working in a cultural whanau worker role. It good to bring my organisation along with us in our journey

I believe that learning te reo Māori is the most important way that pākehā and other ethnicities can build deep understanding and respect for te ao Māori and address institutional and casual racism. And in this troubled time of such huge global challenges mātauranga Māori offers the best opportunity Aotearoa has to respond in a positive way to these huge global and national challenges. For there to be any hope of a positive future for today's rangatahi and coming generations Aotearoa needs to embrace mātauranga Māori and concepts of kaitiakitanga. The reo opens the door to mātauranga Māori and the opportunity to build a strong united Aotearoa fit to face the challenges of today and tomorrow.

Kia kaha te reo! I reckon it’s pretty sad that so many Māori people, through the effects of colonization, have lost their language. When you lose a language, you lose a part of yourself, your history, your story. It’s up to us to bring it back. It won’t be achieved unless we all do it, we all normalize it, and we all celebrate it. Te reo Māori is taonga tuku iho – a treasure to be handed down through the generations. Every New Zealander has a part to play.

So that I can learn the National language of New Zealand

Ki te pupuritia tonu tenei taonga o taatou.

So I can help show my children that it can be easy to use some Reo in everyday life

Our whanau list our identity

Efforts to keep Te Reo growing.

Have a basic grasp of the language

I would like to see te reo Maori be more widely accepted and used in NZ - as our national language I feel it is important for it to be recognised.

Have been waiting for this to come since the mid 1980s when I first learned te reo. Wonderful to see it come to fruition in my old age ; >

New Zealand is a unique place with a unique culture. We should share and celebrate the taonga that is te reo māori. As an official language we should see te reo along side English is all parts of nz life.

I want to show respect to our founding culture and the best way I can do that is learn more Te Reo

I'd love for Te Reo to become more of a staple of NZ's everyday dialect. I'm personally a pakeha but am keen to learn how to speak our country's language!

Te Reo Māori is a national taonga, and I want to actively participate in the celebration of te reo Māori. I am only just beginning my journey, with an ultimate goal toward joining my fiancè and daughter in fluency. Kia kaha te reo Māori!

I've always wanted to speak Te Reo fluently. It is the mother tongue of this country and I feel that we as a nation have a responsibility to take care of the language as it is the essence of its culture.

Te Ao Maori is woven into the cultural fabric of who we are and everything we do.

To keep Te Reo Māori alive & to appreciate the culture indigenous to this land.

To learn more about my whakapapa

Te Ao Māori is beautiful and as a Pākehā we have done a lot of damage to it. Time to try and reverse the damage my tupuna have done and grow te reo in our country!

I am a Niuean born in Aotearoa and I feel so connected to the people, to the land, the love and the waiatas, the language of the Maori. I have two beautiful Ngapuhi daughters so my connection for me is deeper still. I am awakening to my own language of Vagahau Niue and culture and it only feels natural that I do the same with Te Reo and add to my knowledge of the Maori culture and Pasifika People as a whole. I am grateful to you all who helped this joining in Te Reo come about because this morning watching Jenny May dancing to Pere's singing an Earth Wind & Fire song called September, man my spirit just soared and I got up and danced along with them & felt mana in me and I just love that so much. Faaka ua lahi.

Because my teacher made me, i mean told me this was happening

When you learn a language, you also learn about the culture of that language—it's important to preserve our te reo Māori and culture, because it's what makes New Zealand the way it is.

Because te reo Māori is a living language and we need to be using it as much as possible, especially in educational settings

Awhi tamariki

No te mea ka whai mokopuna ahau

We love using Maori in our daily language and learning about Papatunuku. We are also learning how to be kaitiaki of our environment and how to name many things in Maori together

to help build our movement for Reo inclusion for our entire society. . . to help share the beauty

Because I had no choice

To nurture our reo so that it may flourish for many generations to come

Te Reo is our national language and I need to learn more

Always keen to Tautoko Kaupapa Maori, Tu Maori Mai 👀

#Samestorydifferentva'a

BECAUSE

Soak in all the knowledge

It's who I am, a King Country born and breed, Tapu Toa Wahine!

Te reo is our language & we should all learn it. It’s part of our heritage and culture.

Te Puni Kōkiri is a proud partner in the Maihi Karauna. As professionals, as uri and as New Zealanders our kaimahi believe in its vision, ‘Kia māhorahora te reo – every day, by everyone, every way, everywhere’.

because we owe it to our ancestors and to our future generations to learn!

Ko te reo te mauri o te Mana Māori.

We would like to learn everday Te Reo words that we can use at the workshop

To learn, teach and pass on Te Reo Māori to everyone in Aotearoa and beyond. . . .

My children. I was ignorant of the importance of my reo when I was at school and didn’t think it was useful. Now, as an adult I wish with everything that I learnt Māori as a child. Because the struggle is real as an adult to learn, retain and pass it on to my children. It is important that I encourage the importance of normalising our language and culture now so that my children don’t ever have to struggle as adults as I am now. Reo Māori shouldn’t have to be an option to learn for us as Māori. It should be something we are born into. The only option we should have with regard to our language is where we speak it. Which should be everywhere. By being part of Māori Language Week I hope that I can do my small part to encourage and normalise the use of our reo both in the home and in my place of work.

Kia haapai i te oranga tonutanga o too taatou reo

The language will be lost if we wait too long andmy mokos will need it, more than I do, I have the memories

Na taku aroha ki tōku reo te take! Kia kaua hoki te reo e mate ā moa.

I want to discover my sense of identity, and feel closer to my ancestry, my whanau. Know where I came from to know where I can go, and not go forth alone.

Te reo Māori is a national language of Aotearoa and every person in this country should be able to speak reo Māori as fluently as English. If we don't take small steps now, when will we start.

It's important for me to take part and actively engage and promote the use of reo Māori in the workplace to honour one of NZ's national languages. As the language of it's indigenous people this provides inclusion and cultural appropriateness in my workplace to show that it values tangata whenua and tangata Māori on a daily basis.

To celebrate and experience joy through using one of our national languages, a language that is connected to our people, land, and who we are as a nation.

I learn te reo Māori as it was the first human language of our whenua. I love the sound of the language and its poetic nature. I wish i had grown up in a multi/bi lingual environment so I wasn't so mono lingual. Every language is a window into another reality and learning other languages reminds us that there are many world views and pulls us away from ethnocentrism. I hope one day that all children of our country will have the chance to learn to reo Maori and English . I think it would greatly improve race relations in our country and we'd all be better for it.

Mai mai te reo ketekete i te whenua, te reo au i ngā pūkerekere hau, te reo kaha i te Moana nui a Kiwa. Inā ka whakaae mai, nō te whenua tonu te reo Māori, engari nā ngā iwi Māori i tāreia mō tātou katoa ki te ora. Mā te reo ka whakakotahi nei tātou e ngā iwi katoa o Aotearoa.

Nōku te reo, nō ōku tūpuna ki au, ki aku tamariki. He ataahua te reo me ōna āhuatanga :)

Because I care about our nation and our culture.

Because it’s my kaupapa. My Whānau. My life. My aroha. If we don’t take part the culture would die off and be drowned by everyone else’s cultures

Get acquainted with the Maori culture. Thank you.

Because I am Maori, to embrace out tupuna matauranga, & weave into our lifes in 2020. Its so important to keep pono to truly who we are as Maori the foundation of Maoridom sprouts from te ao maori way of life. So the more we can connect with te reo maori the better in the long run as a whole country,

E hiahia ana au ki te tautoko tēnei kaupapa hei tohu ki te ao whānui o te whakahirahiratanga o tō tātau reo rangatira. Te reo Māori plays such an important part of my life and is the essence of my identity. As such it is a no brainer that when an opportunity like this presents itself to be able to tautoko and participate in such an amazing event there is no question that I would take part. Thank you Ngāhiwi mā for putting out such an inspiring invitation to Aotearoa to get behind the continued support and revitalisation of te reo Māori.

to just have fun

Because I want to learn more about my maori history and learn more reo

Because it represents the land in which we live in!

Because I am obligated to serve my language as it has done ten-fold for myself

To be a role model for students to have bicultural teaching practice!

He taonga te reo, our reo is a treasure and the key to the world of our tipuna! Tohaina te reo!

I want to be more confident in speaking, understanding and using te reo Māori. I have done several Māori courses and would like to build on what I have learnt.

So that I can act as an ally under Te Tiriti ō Waitangi as a Pakeha. We are a bi cultural country and I have a great amount of respect for Māori culture

Want to share NZs unique heritage, culture and language.

To learn, understand and embrace Maori Culture.