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'

So I can learn more about maori culture

To promote maori Language in NZ and make Aotearoa unique

It means a lot to me to become part of the Māori whanau and speaking the language is the huge part of integrating and sense of belonging.

my why is to get rooted in my Mauri

Te Reo is NZ's indigenous language, but poorly utilised and upheld in conversation. Its time to rejuvenate the language so more people are speaking.

Whakawhanungatanga - coming together; making connections.

Te reo Maori is one of our three official languages, and the most beautiful. We should all have some awareness, and ideally a little knowledge, of it, as part of the privilege of living in New Zealand and sharing our land.

Te reo is the language of our country.

To support the use of te Reo Maori in New Zealand, the home of the Language

Because I want my children to learn more about their culture and be able to embrace it confidently with pride. Its apart of our history and our country. I'd love nothing more to have both myself and my children know the language of our ancestors

with my daughter attending kohanga reo its time for me to walk the talk, if its important for her to know the reo, its important for me

We are keen to expand our use of Te Reo here at the gardens.

Learning another language helps to think in a different way and understand and respect another culture

kia ora its important to take part in maori since its a fun language

Identity and better understanding.

Te Ao Māori enriches people in many ways. The more people that speak the reo, the more people will be enriched by experiencing it. It can help the world.

Although I am not Maori by blood, it is my culture. I love the culture and believe we should all embrace it as part of every person that lives in New Zealand.

Its a part of New Zealand and my culture and I believe it needs to be embraced and celebrated.

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Ko te reo he wharetapa wha -tinana ko te whakamahinga reo, te mea nui. to see it to hear it to feel it, is something that I strive for in my own home. artworks in te reo gives visual cues that stimulate and cause a physical reaction is the focus of my whanau, How fit is tereo -whanau te reo used as a means of connection in the whanau was something we were needing but were already doing in english, so tohutohu a reo became a much softer approach, as a whanau, and also saw the connections between our whanaunga reo in the Cooks, Tonga, and closer, Tanui, Maniapoto, Northland reo when approached as Mita. -wairua spirutality of the reo, as in reo i tuku iho , ki tua o te arai, te reo a Hahi, Karakia, and oriori, te kiia, te wai, finding what this means is almost a PHD the kaupapa is so broad, -hinengaro cognetive connections when dealing with our whanau reo te reo pakeha, sharpens the reo, kia whakahoahoa te reo hei whakarauora. ka whakaora te reo kia tae atu ki te whakaaro kotahi, hei hopu te ahua o ia reo. -

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As a Pakeha wahine and a manuhiri in Aotearoa it is my responsibility to learn and use Te Reo Māori. Both as part of my commitment to Te Tiriti but also as a person who has the privilege of living in Aotearoa.

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It is important for me to be part of the one in a million to show my commitment to learning Te Reo Maori.

Its important to me because i want to be able to learn my reo and the ways of my culture.

I want to be confident to be fluent in the beautiful language of Aotearoa, Te Reo Māori, as it is my culture.

It is important to me that my baby girl, who is tangatawhenua, grows up understanding her culture and her place in the world. For pakeha like myself, learning te reo is an important step towards healing the wounds of our colonial past.

The blog post slug for this story is: zaid_-_wellington

To practice the language within our family

its something that my friends heavily interested in and I wanna do what I can to support the fam

We already have waiata every day & karakia. I am happy to be a part of what our organisation brings forward for us to embrace with Te Reo. We have a representative as well, a pou but we are all pou. Thank you for this initiative.

It is who I am and I do not know how to speak Māori

We have Māori mokopuna who are attending a kura kaupapa and are fluent in te reo, as is our daughter, their mother. We have learned a bit of te reo and tikanga and really enjoy having many opportunities to practice with whānau. Te Reo is a toanga that everyone in Aotearoa can embrace.

Because it is part of our country, culture and our language.

Being a part of our national identity, enjoying the language

Because this is my language, my culture. I’m a pakeha with a Maori daughter & I feel that it’s just as much mine as it is her’s. I feel connected to this country deep in my soul & I feel my soul grow when I speak or sing in Maori. I feel such pride in NZ as I believe we want to learn our own language. I look at my 72 year old mum & she’s keen as to learn

The awareness of others to understand our culture by teaching them some basic reo to begin with. Then for them to really capture the essence of our world mai ngaa karu ngoo taatou te maaori.

To further develope my Reo to enhance my Mahi with Te Wairua Tapu Haahi in Sydney and to become more Fluent with Our Taonga

It is a part of being a Kiwi and being Maori. It is our mahi to bring non-Maori on this hikoi and it is for the greater good of the country which enhance our point of difference as Kiwi on the international stage. It is way cool to korero Maori whilst overseas and like many nationalities communicate in our national language, it is even better when someone in that vast crowd recognises it. Nga mihi

I believe in continuing the tradition and keeping the language from falling into obscurity.

I have always wanted to learn a language and feel learning Te Reo is the perfect language to start with as its a language of Aotearoa. My kids are also part Maori so feel its my duty to help them be immersed in their own culture.

Kaaore he reo i tua atu i too taatou reo. Pakangatia ra e oo taatou tuupuna moo te reo, nooreira he haepapa too taatou.

Kia ora rā, koia nei te karere i whakarapaina e au ki ngaku põhi pukumata i roto i ngõku rõpū ā marae/ā iwi. Ka mutu koia nei tētahi o aua take, he nui tonu ngā take hoi koia nei ngaku kupu whakakipakipa i taku iwi kāinga ki te hono mai ki te kaupapa. As posted on my facebook marae and iwi pages: He tāonga te reo, ka mutu ko te reo te kaipupuru i te hā o te iwi Māori, koia hoki te mauri o te iwi Māori. Those of you who know me, might also know that I an very passionate about Te Reo. and yes some may also question hmmmm okay why do you not come home and teach te reo then? That I will answer later in the post. The reo I speak and love I accredit to my nannies. Yip my Nana Rihi & the naughty gang as they were sometimes referred to. It was nutured and developed by my many unties and nannies through Kohanga Reo and again in Kura Kaupapa at my beloved kura Te KKM o TPoW with my many unties & cousins as kaiako. It was then reaffirmed and given a stronger foundation under the wings of my beloved Aunty Ma at Tuakau College and again supported by the many nannies and koros I had the privilage to sit next to at the pā. Yip fair to say I may have gotton a bit of slack by some for being there at such a young age, but it is definately not something i regret. I knew in my heart that it wont be long, they would no longer be with us. I knew that the only way to learn from them was to always be around them, so thats where I went. And I will forever be gratefull for the time I got to spend with them all. Today my students are amazed to hear that I say my first kõhanga reo was the parties that I went to as a kid (and baby 🤭) I still have memories of being told by nanny Tangi, oooh yes when you were a baby your bed was in a crate on a pillow on the table. I remember they spoke Māori alot or most of the time at the parties. My most fondest memories of my language aquisition came from my nannies and those happy days. The humor and passion for life they (my nannies) displayed is something I draw on all the time when teaching reo because I believe its unique and true. Its definately true to me and for many others. Yes there is the misconception of " what can Te Reo Māori do for you" well Im sure its quite clear now what it can do and what it must do. and then I also say there is a saying that you dont realize the true value of something until its lost. Let not te reo be one. Some may ask, ok 1 million people speaking at 12pm for one day. What is that going to do. Heres my take on it. 1 million people making a "conscious" descision to choose to speak Māori at a certain point in time is where the lesson is. If you want to learn Te Reo Māori, it is as simple as "choosing to" thats all it takes. Its as simple as that, but one other cool thing to me about this is that, the idea of 1million people making this huge shift im consciousness to celebrate te reo is something to behold. All of what I know and love about Te Reo is from home, from the growlings for singing on the whitebait bench and scarring the fish away to when we do our selves with the water and of course memories of how our nannies went fluidly from Māori to pigeon English and then the sound of my Nana Rihi's terms of endearment aka swearing 😂. This is what Te Reo does for me, and thats why I speak it every day, so all those memories and teachings are with me. Home is where I draw my strength from, and Te Reo is how home is with me everyday. Yes one day I will be back home to teach, when I don't know yet, when the time is right. I thought id simply share this link with a short post but 10mins later it turned into this, and again that is thanks to my reo. E te iwi, rapua te mea ngāro he aha ia rā te mea ngaro, ko te reo, ko te whenua, ko te aroha ki te tangata, he aha rawa rānei E te iwi e rāpua iho rā 💙💙💙💙💙

I moved here 17 years ago from the UK and since having children here and going through Playcentre with them and learning more about the Maori culture I have appreciated the need to keep the language alive. I am also appalled by the attempts by early colonisers to stamp out the use of te reo in schools by Maori. My children enjoy learning te reo at school and though I still feel like a beginner I am willing to keep learning and trying.

morena I'd like to be less intimidated by te reo I find it quite hard to try it out but I would like to improve my own reo. I'd also hear it more in every day life. kia ora Wendy

I have always wanted to learn some maori language and this is the perfect way to start out.

need to learn practice one of the three official languages of New Zealand, part of belonging

Mōku: Ko tōku reo taku ohooho, ko tōku reo taku māpihi maurea. Ka whangai tō tātou reo Māori ki Ngā tamariki mokopuna.

Kiaora lm 63 year's old today lve never learnt how to speak Maori lve always been at the back working on the marae kaimahi kerepoka. lm ashamed of myself that I can't stand up to korero Maori to the matua speaker on the taumata ld do anything to answer there korero back in Maori. .

He hiranga nui tō te reo Māori hei oranga mō tātou e noho mai ana ki te whenua o Aotearoa.

Every little counts! And our little translates into a ripple, so it gets bigger! Little people can do big things!

Very important to connect with whanau and all Maori

Keep Te Reo Alive Kia Kaha

Because we support Te Reo in our school we have 2 Level 2 classes and 6 Level 4 classes.

I acknowledge Te Reo Māori as one of the languages of this nation and, first and foremost, as the language of the partner with the Crown in Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

As a NZ European teacher, by me embracing the language and incorporating it into my everyday practice, I am hoping to empower my learners in a multiple of ways. I empower my students who can speak te reo Māori to have pride in their skills as they help me in my learning. I make the language 'normal', just like English in my room to help build familiarity. I recognise the heritage of this country that I love and the taonga that I can be part of preserving.

Ki taku nei whakaaro, he mea nui te reo o nga tangata. Ka whakamana ia iwi, hapu, a, whanau hoki ki te panuitia ia ratou mita. He waha kotahi noa iho ahau, engari Kia ora, Kia kaha te reo Maori!

To teach children Te Reo

I come from a multicultural background where people liked to share their languages with one another so I am keen to learn.

It is time got me to learn this will be my life ending journey I am 60 years old and I fomt know my own te reo.

Because I want my tamariki to understand and love our language to be proud of who we are as New Zealanders

I'm on my journey with te reo, started along time ago, but changed along the way , knowing back and ready to complete my journey. I wish now I. had carried on, buy I'm ready to. do all this now.

I learned for a year in 2012 and loved it then the university in Canterbury stopped evening classes and I couldn't find another I love the language it increased my confidence and sense of belonging

Te Reo is a growing movement and I want to be a part of it as a New Zealander.

all kiwis should embrace te reo and respect maori culture tikanga, whether pakeha, maori or from other cultures.

Because Maori is who I am, who I identify with, who my people are

I want to start learning the language as a New Zealander we all need to embrace Te Reo one word at a time.

For my moko to learn more of their heritage and to be apart of making that happen for them

I learn Maori up too 100 level at University. I feel it should be compulsory in schools right from the start.

Because we want to play our part in honouring tangata whenua, and we love the poetry of Te Reo.

a second language is another world view. its another perspective. it allows me to go deeper into who I am and who my whanau are. the broader your mind is the better you can make your part of the world.

Nā te mea ko tāku reo tuatahi tēnei.

Te celebrate the indigenous culture of NZ and that which my children are born into

I myself have a child who is of Maori descend therefore I know the importance of keeping her culture alive and celebrating it with her. I want to encourage this in my workplace to ensure I am acknowledging Maori culture as a significant part of who we are and where we are from whether we are Maori or Pakeha.

To keep the reo alive!

Retain the language

to educate our generation but also the next, to revive our reo

To always give back to the community and to give respect

Ko te reo Māori te reo tuatahi o te whenua nei.

Aotearoa is my home. and it is important to me to be part of our indigenous and unique heritage. That heritage includes Te Reo Maori and I would like to honour it's mana with my participation.

important to learn the language of the land we live on

Our Community has a distinct identity within SOuthland. We need to stand up for who we represent and celebrate the return of Te Reno.

I believe taking pride in our language is fundamental in building cultural self esteem. Confidence in our place and our relevance in NZ today. Sharing and celebrating who we are.

Honouring the spirit of te tiriti.

I have just turned 70, now I think it’s time to learn more of my Te Reo

It is important for people to learn, speak and participate in the language of our tupuna. As we teach Māori Tourism here in campus it’s also a great way to utilise the languag

It's my taonga tuku iho!

Mā tātou katoa e whakarauora i te reo Māori hei whitiki te motu whānui. Heoi, ki te kore tātou e tuku atu i ēnei momo wā ki te marea tē tāea e rātou te whakangungu te reo Māori me ngā tikanga Māori. Koirā te take e whakamana nei tā mātou kura i tēnei wā reo Māori, otirā i tēnei wiki o te reo Māori.

I am maori retired at my age i like to speak te reo nga marai tikanga just to learn the basics and advance my reo

To be part of promoting the use of our native language! It’s our Taonga 😍 Will do giveaways and a Sale this weekend - www. taonga. co. nz

I would rather be the 1 in a million then 0.

Taku kainga ki te Aotearoa. Ki te reo kainga o Aotearoa. Ki te reo taonganui o Aotearoa.

I believe it is important for our Maori students and indeed all New Zealanders to encourage the Maori language to be taught and heard.

As a New Zealanders, I think it is important for us to know and understand Reo. Not just the language but also the history.

I have been learning Te Reo on and off for 50 years so if I don't make this honest commitment now I never will

As a teacher, I just want all my students to know how important their identity and culture is. And that Aotearoa has a beautiful native language unique to us that we can all share in and enrich lives with. And for my gorgeous Māori students to always stand tall and hold their mana strong.

Maori language is an important part of not only our history but today. More New Zealanders should be educating themselves in the language. It should be a greater part of our everyday lives.

Because language is important

I Love our language. My mokos can korero maori and I'm learning so we can korero together

I think the future will be bilingual more than now in Aotearoa. I don’t want my future children to be like me and have no idea what their friends are saying or singing half the time. I want to do it for myself as I do not want Te reo to die. It’s our history, it’s this lands real language. I want to be part of the movement for change!

To continue to learn more about te reo Maori and to grow in confidence using it.