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'

Kia tautoko te i kaupapa nei

to study

Te Reo Maori has had a big influence on the person I have become.

For me it is personal. I was not afforded a TeReo Maori education at my white privileged primary school. The education system did not cater for me as a Maori student. I don't want the Maori students in my school to miss out on the opportunity to discover Te Ao Maori.

because I want to learn and understand more te reo Maori and be part of making it used more in our everyday life by all of us in Aotearoa

We got involved because we are a group building a new way for our lives and want to have as much positive stuff as possible in it. We also want as many as possible people recorded to send a clear message that te Reo Maori is on the rise! And get as much awhinatia for it as possible.

We, as a school, embrace te reo and Te Ao Māori. We feel it is important to show our commitment to te reo.

To acknowledge that Te Reo Māori is inportant.

Maaori te whenua. Maaori te reo.

Kia kaha Te reo Maori

I have also wanted to learn to converse in Maori. I am started a course next year that has a large content of Te Maori and would love to be ahead of the game. But small steps for me 👌

to help deaf adults to do sign languages to communication each others in Te Reo Maori, I want to have a go to teach them

Because my language is beautiful and there is so much depth and meaning to our kupu. I am still learning my language and I am encouraged more than ever to learn and speak it with my children. I want to honour my ancestors and all of our ancestors who have paved the way for us. Mauri Ora!

To connect.

It's my birth right, although learning Te Reo has slipped away from me, I am ready to take the Journey to not only learn my language but understand the essence of living in a Māori world.

Te Reo is and should be Aotearoa's first and first official language, lets all be bilingual

I navigate myself by continuing the work of my tupuna, I uphold their mana; And perhaps the sharing of the taonga that is Māoritanga might inspire modern-day Aotearoa to further immerse in Te Ao Māori.

E Arohaina ana te reo e au!

because I can speak te Reo Maori

As part of the whole a "New Zealander" I feel it is important to honour the Tangatewhenua of this country by connecting using New Zealand's first language. We would be horrified if the next generation didn't have access to what makes us so unique and special. The korero and tikanga of a unique and special country and its inhabitants.

He Māori ahau

Because learning about others enriches everyone

My ancestors couldn’t speak Te Reo Māori , so I speak and continue to learn Māori for my ancestors who couldn’t 🤎

I have made the commitment to learn te reo Māori in an 18 month course at my work place. I have just had my first lesson so it feels amazing to be part of this event. I have always wanted to speak another language and I am of Māori descent part of the atiawa iwi so it makes sense to pick this one to learn. Kei te ako au i te reo Māori.

Connecting to my roots, my whanau. Te reo is considered a main language now with many people speaking it. I want to be on that waka and be able to pass it down to my tamariki.

To know the local language is a courtesy

For myself, my family & for my future tamariki to come.

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! )

Learn my language

Te reo is a beautiful language! It is fun to learn, share and enjoy speaking and singing in te reo! It makes you feel that you belong in Aotearoa!

To decolonise and pay homage! To enrich the culture and never let it die

te reo Maori should be part of our daily life, it is our heritage

Growing up in Aotearoa I was always proud that te Reo was an official language, that was used in small ways by friends, whanau, and people around me. But I think it’s important that the language is used fully and by many people.

So my kids learn to. They learn where we come from

Culture and language go hand in hand. We must keep this beautiful culture alive through the language

I just love Maori Culture, been brought up Maori family and friends I love it, makes me who I am today.

I feel sad that Maori were forced to abandon their language. I feel a responsibility to help to put it right. Our culture was forced upon them. We all live together, I think it is important to understand one another as best we can, so that everyone has a sense of belonging and inclusion .

"Kōrero Māori i ngā wā katoa, i ngā wāhi katoa. " Speak Māori everywhere, all the time. I am committed to being a time and a place where te reo Māori can thrive in its homeland, Aotearoa.

Our commitment to the Te Tiriti o Waitangi living in Aotearoa

kia korero māori te ao katoa. Kia kitea, kia rongo I to tatou red ataahua The blog post slug for this story is: rickie-lee_-_rotorua

Because I'm a New Zealander and I should know how to speak Maori

I have lived in Australia for 20 years but NZ is my home, my culture, my heritage. I don't want to lose that or my children to grow up without that influence. I want to reconnect with my culture and the history and the language of my whanau. This has been that motivator!

I am Maori and it’s important that people who live in our country have a better understanding of who I am as Maori.

I must learn to honour my mother, to not forget my country of birth and to be connected . . . Special scared language. . . . . My family immigrated to Australia when I was a child, I feel I lost my identity. . . I am still kiwi and I will speak Maori. . . I love my country, . . . I honour my ancestors. . . Thanks heeps. .

Tautoko I Te Kaupapa Kia kaha ake to tātou reo

I am maori and want to learn my Reo.

Māori is apart of my culture and it’s important to me, I would love to learn more

To be respectful, to learn, to inquire, to observe and to hopefully, one day, know more!

It is important because it is one of the languages of Aotearoa and should be spoken in everyday life as greetings or simple sentences by everyone. It should also be mandatory in schools along with whakapapa and tikanga

Te reo is important to our identity as New Zealanders

To keep our reo alive and spread our culture to those that maybe unaware of our whakapapa or their own connections. A great time to stay connected within our tikanga, values and beliefs and keeping our rituals alive. Keeping our language sustainable.

I am a Kaiako and a proud young maori Māmā. Dedicated to our Reo and helping others around me

It would be a great sadness to allow for Maori language to be forgotten, as its part of New Zealand's heritage and identity. My why is to set an example for my children. Encourage them to learn and take interest and preserve Maori culture for future generations.

I am on my personal journey learning Te reo Maori for my family and I

Its about normalising the use of our language and making it fun for those who have limited experience with it. If we do this now then generations to come will be more knowledgeable and able to use it with the mana it deserves.

I just want to learn Te Reo Maori! ! ! I have lived in NZ for 23 years and am still not confident to speak Maori without people looking at me like I shouldn't :(

It's part of my own whakapapa

I have just moved home to Aotearoa. I want to know more about my country and share this with friends and family. I am going back into teaching and want to connect more with my students.

Inspire and motivate others who have had a bad experience learning previously. We can still give it a go, push the negativity to the side and lets stand up for ours

As a New Zealander it is important to value te reo Māori as a toanga. I am a strong advocate for te reo to be mandatory in schools for all to learn.

to acknowledge and support our New Zealand history and understand a new culture

To honour my tupuna, especially my kuia, she was subjected to racism because she was Maori. Honour the Treaty by respecting tino rangatiratanga

To continue to learn, share and revitalise our taonga.

Kia kaha Te reo Maori

Maori people and their language touched my life. I was a Hawaiian who didn’t see value in her own culture until she was immersed in Maori culture and reo. I love my whanaunga down there. In my heart, I never left.

Because Te Reo Maori is a fun thing to learn. It is NZ's other language and I think it is important

I want to learn Māori because I think the Māori culture is very unique and that learning the language is a part of learning they’re culture

It is important to me to learn my native language.

Its important as a Kiwi to respect the Maori culture by learning Te Reo

Because as a family for overseas we also believe that roots are important and showing respect and appreciation for your culture it’s the base of our learnings as a family , we are proud for having the chance to learn more about Maori culture .

I have retired recently and now have more time on my hands to learn. I previously worked for a Maori organisation, having the reo would have been beneficial to my work. Would like to do for my own self development. I would like to be able to participate in conversations in maori.

Our Maaori language is unique specifically to Aotearoa

To have a better understanding of the language and culture. It's such an important part of our NZ identity and everyone should be taking the opportunity to learn the beautiful culture and history.

My why is my two children and my partner (soon to be husband). When I found out I was hapu with our first son, I vowed to try my best to learn to speak Te reo. I wanted to know his language so I could encourage him as he grew to speak both Maori and English and I wanted to understand the korero that was being had around me by my partners whanau.

I love Maori language. It's a beautiful part of NZ culture which is totally underused. I love Maori stories and culture. It's wonderful. I want it to become more integrated into my life even though I'm a pakeha.

It's important as new zealanders to learn about New Zealand culture and heritage. Language is core to that.

Maori is part of the world's language diversity and part of the human heritage of all of us. Maori is also an interesting specific case of minority language - the politics of minority languages is important in Switzerland where I live, teach and research, and Maori can be a stimulating comparative example in this respect.

Being a kiwi

“Because it’s fun” says my eight-year-old tamahine :) And I say also because it’s just, right, beautiful, enlightening and powerful to kōrero in the first language of our whenua.

learning te reo Māori is important to me because it is the reo of my tupuna and our whenua Aotearoa/NZ. it is great for all to learn the language of our whenua, which is unique to us in the world.

Tangata whenua

I want to learn more about Maori people and improve my Maori language.

Whoops I meant to sign up earlier.

Because Te Reo Maori is not spoken anywhere else in the world

As a Maori wahine I think it is very important , it's apart of who I am. I want to teach my children there heritage and language aswell

Te Reo Maori is an official language of NZ, it's our culture and history. It's one of the Principles of the NZ curriculum, we should honour and celebrate it.

I have three tamariki under 3. I wasn’t brought up learning much of te ao māori but was always eager to learn. Now my tamariki are enrolled in one of our local kōhanga reo and it’s not only giving them the opportunity to learn & speak but our whole whānau. Mainly, my children are my why.

It is a language that belongs in New Zealand and I would never what to see it die out.

We can each contribute in some small way to effect great change.

Ko te Reo ake o Aotearoa nei he reo o te tangata whenua. He kaupapa nui, he kaupapa rangatira, he kaupapa tuturu hoki. Arohatia tonutia te reo Maori ❤️ The blog post slug for this story is: kenneth_-_waimarino

I would like to move to New Zealand and become part of the community. To do that I need to learn more about the heritage and people that live there. This seems like one good way to start the journey.

So I can help my grandchildren

Kia whiua ki te ao, ki nga iwi katoa

I think it's an important part of being a New Zealand that we have a good grasp of Te Reo and that I feel confident to teach it in a classroom and ECE centre

I am a wahine Māori, who grew up without knowing how to speak Te Reo Māori. I decided last year to make a committment to learn at te Awanuiarangi, Whakatane in the Te Pōkaitahi Reo program. Level 1-6. I left my hometown of Taumarunui and moved into a home in Ruatoki, Whakatane. I have since become involved with eight whanau helping each other grow our maara kai. I am devoted to this journey, I am 60 years old and am very happy in my time of life right now because of my decision.

To strengthen and normalise the reo spoken at my kura

Learning Te Reo deserves the recognition and respect to ensure it becomes the norm in my son and mokopuna lives.

We want to celebrate our Bicultural partnership and heritage

Because my school is doing ut and I wouod like to contribute to the schools moments!