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'

It is our first language and it shouldn't be unknown or an after thought

To help and be a part of a better New Zealand

The Te Reo language is part of every Kiwi's identity. Entwined in our rich history of Aotearoa. I would love to be able to speak basic conversational Te Reo.

Learning another language is great for brain development, also Maori is our countries special culture and it should be embraced.

I am Pākehā but have nieces and nephews who have whakapapa. I want to uphold Te Reo for them.

Language is culture and culture is identity.

Ko te reo Maori te reo taketake o Aotearoa. Let's get in behind it, support our Maori brothers and sisters, and take on all those beautiful values that come with the reo. Mauriora

Feeling like too many generations have missed out on something special and owed to us that is a given right. I want to be apart of knowing my culture and reo, I want to make a stance that maori is just as important in everything

I am Maori and I want to celebrate it through Te Reo, Waiata and the arts. I'm still at the beginning of this journey to fully embrace my birth right.

I am a member of my marae and hapu trustees. I want to participate in the korero and understand more.

As someone struggling to find my tuakiri Māori, this is a great way to keep myself accountable and truly dig deeper in my passion for my hertiage. And so that when and if my future babies do arrive, they can have as much mātauranga Māori as they can, know who they are and not face battles I have had to face

Te reo is a beautiful language and i believe it is the responsibility of every citizens and residents of New Zeaaland to safeguard, promote, and facilitate the use of this amazing autochthonous language.

I arrive recently in New Zealand and it is important for me to learn te reo in order to understand the culture of this country

My Maori great grandmother brought up my father after his mother died when he was a baby. This was in spite of her already having 17 children of her own - my grandfather- the oldest. I remember attending tangis as a child. I feel privileged to be part of a family that has regular family reunions. But I know nothing of the language and living in Australia has made it easy to ignore. On return to NZ i amazed at the prevalence of the language and how it has become/ is becoming integrated into mainstream communication. I would like to feel that I have at least made some sort of effort to acquaint myself with the language and if possible learn some of its rudiments.

We should have all learned this as children.

Language is an important part of community. My children already start to learn in school and I want to support that as well as my own participation in life in New Zealand.

I'm not a native New Zealander, but this country has welcomed me and become my home. The language of my paternal ancestors was dying, and has been revived, I couldn't help with that but I can help the Maori language by learning and passing it on.

Ko te reo Maori te reo taketake o Aotearoa. Let's get in behind it, support our Maori brothers and sisters, and take on all those beautiful values that come with the reo. Mauriora

There are many things that define New Zealanders and connect us to our home but te reo Māori is unique

I have always wanted to learn but something always came up and I never made it a priority. I am now making it a priority.

my why survival . . . . . 2019/2020 challenged my every being, loss, loneliness, and then my own battle with Breast Cancer. I survived, an challenge myself to learn Te Reo and stop with excuses. Nuku noa. Teena

We must keep learning and passing on our unique reo to family and friends. This way it won’t be lost. With re reo, we embrace and absorb that which is natural in te ao Maori. The benefit is great as our tamariki will know who they are and their place in their world. There will be no misgivings about their turangawaewae.

I attended The Justice Conference a couple of years back and heard John Catmur speaking about biculturalism in NZ. At one point he shared that even if all Māori in Aotearoa were fluent in te reo Māori, it would not be enough to preserve the language. It will take all of us. And that opened my eyes. If I didn't try and learn te reo Māori, I felt like I'd be contributing to the injustice that Māori have been experiencing since the British people arrived and that was not OK with me.

To keep te reo alive and thriving within my whānau, community, hapu and iwi.

Because it’s the indigenous language of my birth country and I feel I should learn it before attempting to learn another international language.

I feel I should learn Maori language before I chose to learn a language from another country.

My children are Māori and I want them to grow up in a country where their history and ancestors as well as their future, as Māori, are celebrated. I want my children to be confident and proud to be Māori and know that they have a place and I want te reo Māori to be heard more and become commonplace.

My grandchildren speak to reo maori and I would like to reply. And also my siblings all speak to reo I feel kinda left out.

Because its a part of my cultural identity and the right to speak my language.

My why is because I want to myself and my child to be bilingual. For te reo to be a part of our everyday vocabulary. I am making progress but it is slow. I am more confident with using te reo at home than in my workplace, however because I work as an ECE teacher I need to break down my own insecurities to make te reo visible in my practice.

It's through hearing my nanas experiences and the experiences of her mother and those of that time and earlier before them had their culture and native tongue suppressed and vilified, to say the very least. My first hearing of my great grandmother's experiences from my grandmother herself, I felt a grave pain inside of me, not necessarily for my great grandmother's experiences as a person but I felt deep loss in my pit of being for Maori as a collective. It's the all too common story of Maori being physically, verbally abused by teachers at school. This was considered an appropriate measure to receive when one was heard speaking Te Reo. To place myself in my ancestors shoes, is a painful place to travel. The effects of this on a personal (mental, emotional, relationship with self and world around) are horribly tremendous. The systemic effects it has had leaches over the generations in a socio-economic way but also genetically (yes trauma in our DNA is passed along). The fact that the colonalist came to our land and disrupted our people and want to break apart our culture proves to me that what we have is a power in birthright, a power in whakapapa, a power in connection and a power in our Te Reo Maori. This is the reason I want to weave Te Reo Maori into my life more so and continue to learn Te Reo. My intention of passing along my cultures language to my future children.

I’ve always wanted to learn Te Reo but life has been very busy n I guess I’m not getting any younger so why not

Te Reo Māori is the language of tangata whenua of Aotearoa, and it's a matter of respect for all citizens to learn some of this language

I want to be able to korero to whanau, kids, mokos! ! I really want to be able to understand and converse in the reo fluently.

I am a pakeha who has lived away from Aotearoa for 30 years, but this makes me feel connected and celebrate my homeland.

For my children, and my children's children. Keeping Maori culture thriving.

It is important for me because I want to set an example for my pēpi and whānau. our reo is beautiful and i am glad that I can help by passing down what I know to my whānau so by the time we grow our reo will too.

I was bought up with basic Maori songs and using stick and poi in West Auckland and would like to take this further. Although I'm not Maori I feel it is my language too - as a New Zealander & have always wanted to be fluent in Maori. I have bought Maori language books but would ultimately love to understand the names of places & stories behind them and feel confident with using the language.

I have many reasons I would like to take part but the most important reason is to pass on knowledge to my children.

I think its important to encourage the use of te reo, and I hope to be one of the first million

Its apart of our history and if we lose our language we lose who we are as Maori people

I want to learn more about the culture. Show respect and understanding and be able to share with others.

So that my children will be able to speak our language fluently.

Language and story matter to me. People matter, and so do our differences. Language will help us to open door and understand, celebrate these. I want to be part of change. Building bridges and sustain cultural identities.

I'm nz maori and have little knowledge of my own mother tounge. My child are learning in school and I need to learn to help my family continue our language inside our home.

My why is firstly my daughter Mahina- Bell, she is in the bilingual unit at kura and loves Te Reo, loves Kapa Haka and really connects with who she is, her identity. As a Maori and Pacifica I have seen her confidence grow and give her a good foundation of who she is, I just want to help her build on that alongside her so we can speak openly in our own whare and to others that visit. My second reason is me! I want to speak Te Reo and I have always wanted to but I lack confidence, and I am such a perfectionist but I want to set my Reo Maori Wings free.

I am ready to learn

Te Reo Maori me ona Tikanga is what I have been brought up with since I was small. Now at the age of 50, I have a desire a passion to learn more, to stand with my People and to be a proud Maori of whom can speak our Mother Tongue, confidently, fluently would make me so proud. I have always had the language around me as I was growing up and my Nana taught me a lot as a child. Growing in to adolescence, I tended to stray and Reo was not spoken in our home by my parents, extended whanau or in the community. It was as if Te Reo was not cool. We would get shy! How silly is that, to be ashamed of our own language. As time got on I got back in to Te Reo at High School and the passion in me began to grow. I was hungry for Te Reo and went to Whare Wananga where I learnt more and started learning Te Ataarangi at Waikato Polytechnic under the guidance of Whaea Petiwaea Manawaiti. I loved it there and continued to blossom in my Reo. I moved abroad and spent many years overseas, however my Reo never left me and I always knew one day it would serve it’s purpose and would be my companion for the rest of my life. It’s my identity and I want to share it with my loved one’s with those who want to learn. Working throughout the years has pulled me from my Marae, Haapu and Iwi, but I would return home when I could and when the matter arose. Over the last 13 years, I have been doing Wananga at home, online and trying to upskill myself a bit more. Recently over the last 3-4 months, I have been learning Reo under the guidance of my Aunty, Robyn Roa and her daughter Hariru every fortnight Tuesday via Zoom of where we all learn our Reo that was spoken by our Tupuna who have passed on. Keep our Ngati Werewere, Ngati Haua dilect, Mita and Words alive. I had my two mokopuna live with me for 2 years and they both enrolled at Kohanga Reo and went on to Te Kura Kaupapa Maori. Having them under my roof, led me to Korero ano. I had to in order to help my moko’s, but they also helped me to speak again, to not be shy and to be proud of my Reo no matter where I was. This was the turning point of where I wanted to refresh and get back into the learning mode of our Reo. Since then, it has grown stronger and I am doing what ever I can to learn and korero. So for me, I will do what I have to in order to take part and to be amongst the millions of people to make this Dream, Goal become a Reality. It has been a long time coming. I am passionate about this and am proud to say, that it’s Cool to Korero! We were made to feel low, to not be proud of ourselves, our Culture, our Reo. Maori Language Week at school was one of my Auntys coming to school to cook a Maori Bread, we would learn how to count from 1 to 10 and learn some colours and may be do a play about Rona and the Moon or Maui and the Sun. Dressed in brown paper piupiu. It was horrible and degrading. Now we have much to be proud of with the birth of Kohanga Reo, Kura Kaupapa, Wharekura and Wananga that have been opened. With Te Panekiretanga, the revitalisation of Te Reo on our TV Screens in our Waiata. How can we not be proud of the successes that Maori have achieved over the years. From the Petihana Reo Maori in 1972 to now, 2020, we have come a long way and have much to be grateful for from our forefathers, predecessors who fought, paved the way for our future and did not give up fighting the cause. We owe it to them to continue in a Humarie forum of which will benefit us all. I am here to definitely stand tall and make a difference mo toku Reo me ona Tikanga. Kia ora, Na Sally Wilson.

For me it is more than important to be part in this movement in order to raise awareness and fulfill my dream of learning and developing, improving myself and be a part of the world's amazing big picture.

I would like to have more understanding of a culture that is not my own and to do that an important part is to understand the language and stories

My Mother and Father never spoke Maori and that filtered down to my brothers and sisters. I have tried some courses, however it always had some sort of problem where I couldn't complete. My mothers side of the family are all fluent with the reo and I want to try to understand what they are saying so I can korero back to them with fluency.

I love languages and have been committed to learning French the last 2 years however I don't know our own national language fluently which really is not acceptable in my opinion. I am determined to learn and teach my children so we can speak te reo only at home. I am also studying to become a GP with my main focus on our Maori and pacific people so I need to learn the languages as fast as possible beginning with Maori.

Many years ago a Maori from te arawa iwi helped me out and I promised to learn the maori language as a sign of respect, at the time I only learnt a little but now want to learn more

For my children, I want for them to know and appreciate te reo Māori.

Te Reo Maori me ona Tikanga is what I have been brought up with since I was small. Now at the age of 50, I have a desire a passion to learn more, to stand with my People and to be a proud Maori of whom can speak our Mother Tongue, confidently, fluently would make me so proud. I have always had the language around me as I was growing up and my Nana taught me a lot as a child. Growing in to adolescence, I tended to stray and Reo was not spoken in our home by my parents, extended whanau or in the community. It was as if Te Reo was not cool. We would get shy! How silly is that, to be ashamed of our own language. As time got on I got back in to Te Reo at High School and the passion in me began to grow. I was hungry for Te Reo and went to Whare Wananga where I learnt more and started learning Te Ataarangi at Waikato Polytechnic under the guidance of Whaea Petiwaea Manawaiti. I loved it there and continued to blossom in my Reo. I moved abroad and spent many years overseas, however my Reo never left me and I always knew one day it would serve it’s purpose and would be my companion for the rest of my life. It’s my identity and I want to share it with my loved one’s with those who want to learn. Working throughout the years has pulled me from my Marae, Haapu and Iwi, but I would return home when I could and when the matter arose. Over the last 13 years, I have been doing Wananga at home, online and trying to upskill myself a bit more. Recently over the last 3-4 months, I have been learning Reo under the guidance of my Aunty, Robyn Roa and her daughter Hariru every fortnight Tuesday via Zoom of where we all learn our Reo that was spoken by our Tupuna who have passed on. Keep our Ngati Werewere, Ngati Haua dilect, Mita and Words alive. I had my two mokopuna live with me for 2 years and they both enrolled at Kohanga Reo and went on to Te Kura Kaupapa Maori. Having them under my roof, led me to Korero ano. I had to in order to help my moko’s, but they also helped me to speak again, to not be shy and to be proud of my Reo no matter where I was. This was the turning point of where I wanted to refresh and get back into the learning mode of our Reo. Since then, it has grown stronger and I am doing what ever I can to learn and korero. So for me, I will do what I have to in order to take part and to be amongst the millions of people to make this Dream, Goal become a Reality. It has been a long time coming. I am passionate about this and am proud to say, that it’s Cool to Korero! We were made to feel low, to not be proud of ourselves, our Culture, our Reo. Maori Language Week at school was one of my Auntys coming to school to cook a Maori Bread, we would learn how to count from 1 to 10 and learn some colours and may be do a play about Rona and the Moon or Maui and the Sun. Dressed in brown paper piupiu. It was horrible and degrading. Now we have much to be proud of with the birth of Kohanga Reo, Kura Kaupapa, Wharekura and Wananga that have been opened. With Te Panekiretanga, the revitalisation of Te Reo on our TV Screens in our Waiata. How can we not be proud of the successes that Maori have achieved over the years. From the Petihana Reo Maori in 1972 to now, 2020, we have come a long way and have much to be grateful for from our forefathers, predecessors who fought, paved the way for our future and did not give up fighting the cause. We owe it to them to continue in a Humarie forum of which will benefit us all. I am here to definitely stand tall and make a difference mo toku Reo me ona Tikanga. Kia ora, Na Sally Wilson. The blog post slug for this story is: sally_-_rotorua_97uigeqwopxuvwnt5mxs_w The blog post slug for this story is: sally_-_rotorua_h1heayiyhrxeh0g20tae3a

Because it respects mother tongue

Our boy is of Māori descent i was born and bred in Aotearoa. To fully appreciate the land i was born on and to ensure our boy is connected to his Whakapapa it is important for me to understand and korero more in te reo māori

Te Reo Māori is a world I grew up in, from the moment I was conceived, to being born and growing up. However that all changed as an adult when I moved away, days turned into years and now that I am a kaiako working in a ece; I find myself wishing I kept up with my Te Reo. . . . .

This is my heritage and i feel that to honour that i should take part in this journey

I learned some time ago about maori culture, and I was fascinated, I readed a trilogy of Sara Lark and I bring me opportunity to discover the maori tradition trought beatiful history. I felt sadness when I kwen that this culture was getting to over end. I would like to discover this ancestral language and their culture, its very interesting for me. Thansk for this movement.

I am, and always will be a proud Māori woman. The only thing that is missing in my life, is the ability to speak my language Te Reo Māori. My father was fluent and a proud decedant of Te Whānau ā Apanui. Sadly, he passed away when I was young, resulting in my siblings and I being raised by our beautiful pākehā mother/way of life. I am determined to speak my language in due course. Ngā mihi, Anahera Waenga

So that my children will be able to speak our language fluently.

Looking at my Teaching and Learning

Māori language has been a part of my upbringing, and I aspire to being fluent. It wasn't an option for me to learn at school and so I am attending a night class at the moment, and doing my own study as well, through the Korero Mai tv show and resources provided by the Ministry of Education. I would also like to use more te Reo in the classroom - I am always increasing my use, and would love to speak only te Reo with the children. I teach preschoolers and at this age they absorb languages and so it's a great time to bring more vocabulary in to their lives. This is the heritage of our land and it is so important to embrace both te Reo and tikanga as part of being a New Zealander.

Hello I am trying to learn as much as possible for the sake of my 4 young 2x11-13-15yrs of ages. All that I can to educate myself and them in as much culture and traditions as I can because I've got to

Te Reo is not only a beautiful language but identifies uniqueness and love for country that I am proud to call my home.

I am hopeful we can create a culture in NZ where we are all considered tangata whenua regardless of race, colour, culture or religion. I want to learn Te reo as it part of my culture as a New Zealander. I am proud to live in Aotearoa.

Māori is our special language in New Zealand. I want to help keep it alive or all of us.

Simply put, I believe it is important to speak the indigenous language of the land you stand on.

To teach my foster kids their language, so they at least feel comfortable hearing familiar words and sounds, as we don't know where their future is.

My grandson is eight years old and proud to be Maori. I am a Pakeha and want to show him that that I am also proud he is Maori and would like to be respectfully and actively involved in his life journey as Maori

Te Reo Maori is not only a beautiful language it is the first language of Aotearoa. For Maori and Pakeha to live and work peacefully in this beautiful land of ours all of us need to know and respect both Te Reo and the tikunga of the people and connect well to this land. Speaking Te Reo Maori connects me as a Pakeha strongly to te whanua, te Ngahere me te Moana o Aotearoa. Pat, Waipu

It is a treasured gift handed down to us by our ancestors and I have for years had a yearning to learn.

I identify as Tūwharetoa i te Aupouri and Ngāti Kahungunu. The reo is important because it is part of my cultural identity and my personal place in the world.

Te Reo enhances my connection to my ancestors and to Aotearoa.

Born on foreign soil, I came to live in the most beautiful country in the world. Part of my journey of settling in was to learn more and embrace the Māori culture. Learning te reo Māori is a pivotal part of the wonderful life I have enjoyed since being in Aotearoa.

It has been a long time coming- hearing Te reo Māori no matter where you are in Aotearoa, te ao whānui hoki. It's time to normalise our reo rangatira. Kia kaha te korero Māori kia rongo ngā tōpito o tēnei ao to tātou reo tino ataahua, tino hohonu. With normalising te reo Maori, the mana of our reo will grow, become strong and be revitalised

Sense of belonging.

Kia ora. I love our native language. As a child I loved singing waiata. As a young adult I became lazy and uninterested (in pretty much everything). I am keen to learn again.

Being connected, understanding, learning and being comfortable and proud in my own skin

Mohio ki taku reo, mohio ki ahau.

I'm proud to be a Māori wahine proud of my culture, proud to be able to speak 2 languages.

Te reo Maori is an integral part of being Kiwi.

I want to do what I can to honour and help strengthen Te Reo Māori in Aotearoa.

To honour Te Tiriti and to help build the nation we can become. Why should all our conversations happen in the language of the coloniser?

Its the original language of our land, birds, trees

My boys are an eighth Maori - my husband is a quarter. My mother-in-law (his Mum) is half-Maori, yet grew up being told she was not allowed to speak Te Reo or identify as Maori. While it isn't my heritage by blood, it is an important part of who my boys are and I don't want them to lose that link to the past. We need to take the time to remember that tikanga and Te Reo are an important part of the fabric that holds our country together.

The significance is as a nation, we can embrace the language of scriptural truth, and not miss out in delivering Gods word, in our own language in “Te Reo Maori”!

Te Reo Maori is one of three official languages in Aotearoa. We should all be able to speak, learn and share in more languages. There are many examples of people who speak more than one language and do very well in being and understanding inclusiveness, equity and more positive relationships. I am sitting in a languages PLD session and there is such an emphasis on languages from overseas, rather than students being offered and learning Te Reo Maori and or Ocean languages that are closer to us here in Aotearoa. There should not be a thinking that Oceanic languages are for only Maori or Pasifika peoples. It would be nice to see people dismiss unconscious biases and learn languages to make us stronger as an Oceanic part of the world. Te Reo would be the greatest place to begin this journey.

I want to support

It’s important because this is me acknowledging my ancestors and also acknowledging the world we live in today Freedom of speech and all that

I am a Pakhea and as a New Zealander I lucky to have two official languages. It is time that I learn use te reo

Proud of my culture X It's good to know so you can pass on to future generations to come. Keep our culture alive ! The blog post slug for this story is: teressa_-_maramarua

For all of Aotearoa to learn and grow as a whole hapori.

For my whanau and for my own continuous learning journey

What drives me to learn Te Reo Maori is to honour the Tangata Whenua of this land by making sure as tau iwi I put in the Mahi to educate myself and those around me on tino rangatiratanga to create a more inclusive Aotearoa community.

So that I can be closer to my tupuna, my hapu and whanau. I want to laugh at the jokes, understand the waiata, the philosophical whakatauki and converse more without feeling whakamà.

My identity is bound to my ancestral language.