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 stay in this beautiful country.

To support the language of Maori. Also to support IDEA Services organisation.

Because te reo is so beautiful and a taonga it’s unique to all who love our country and people of this land . the haka has put us on a global stage and so would te reo . I just wish my nan was here to teach me conversational Maori.

I have recently returned to NZ after many years overseas. We are very proud to promote our Maori and Polynesian culture internationally but a sense of pride is hollow when not backed up by actions to make it part of my personal culture and way of being. Learning te reo is a first step.

Teach the kids

toku whakapapa. Ko toku reo ko toku taonga, ko toku taonga ko toku reo.

I have learned Te Reo at school , and Te Ao Maori at Polytech. I want to keep it up so I don't forget

I believe everyone who lives in Aotearoa should have the opportunity to learn Te Reo. It is an official language in this country after all. Also, if we want to honour te Tiriti we need to learn the language in order to understand the culture and kaupapa.

As a New Zealander, it is our Reo!

Interested to learn.

Kei te mokemoke au mo te reo kaore na tangata o konei mohio ki te korero Maori te nuinga he Pakeha.

I am a Grandmother to 2 Maori mokopuna and I would like to set an example to them to embrace their heritage and language.

Important to embrace the language of the country and people who accepted us when me migrated here.

Te reo is an important part of New Zealand/Aotearoa's cultural identity. The more we celebrate it and enjoy its richness, the more we can come together as a people.

It's important to take part, as it is a part of us. A part of New Zealand that can enrich so much knowledge onto others.

As a citizen of a country with dual languages, I'd like to develop my te reo Māori to feel confident to use it and teach others.

Kia Ora. I was watching Pere Wihongi on T. V. One this morning and he really inspired me to take part and awesome waiata. Nga mihi Maria

I want to recognise Te Reo as the original language of this country, and begin to use it in everyday situations.

Important kaupapa , need to show my support

Because it is important to get the language in constant use so it becomes an every day th8ng not just a token gesture

Because I believe our native language should be spoken by more people , more often .

Speaking Te Reo supports my work with Whanau

Te Reo itself is important and participating in Huataus like this help us get more involved.

National indigenous language

I am tyring to make an effort to learn more about my Maori side - with the hopes of being able to understand when Te Reo is being spoken and to be able to respond accordingly.

This is important for me and my tupuna and my whakapapa.

I am of Paskifika decent however I acknowledge the beautiful reo of our Tangata whenua in this beautiful country we call home , It is important to maintain our identity especially our language that we speak , Im keen to learn more and share with my family also ,

This is our language and it's good to share it with the rest of the world.

to help the maori comnunity out as any way as possilbe

Diversity in this world is important. It makes life more interesting and enjoyable. A culture is kept alive mainly by its language so to see any language or culture in decline is very sad. Te Reo is a beautiful language that is special and unique in NZ and to think it was almost wiped out to colonisation is scary! Let’s hope we can get to a million and more Reo speakers by 2040 (or earlier)!

So the language is not lost and becomes a part of everyone's day.

I am Maori from Ngati Wai living in the south island and this kind of activity makes me feel closer to my family

Even though I'm not of Māori heritage, I think that it's extremely important for the Māori language to be enhance, not just in schools, but also in the work places and in the community. I think that most people are still a bit racial to Māori without knowing it (though we are getting much better) but the true meaning of Māori language has been lost, I think, and it's time that we regain that back and bring back the true meaning of Aoteroa.

Because I think it is important to learn Maori.

cause mister is making me

I think Te Reo Maori is an important part of our history and want it to continue

I am still learning te reo and my culture. I have been very disconnected and am on a learning journey to reconnect

Show the importance of Te Reo Maori to our students! Let them show us what they know and teach them new words, phrases, games, and stories.

We feel it is important to normalise Te Reo Maori in Aotearoa We have an office where some are fluent and others are new to this beautiful language. Our office has Maori and non-Maori workers who all support the Reo being spoken as a nation

Journey of learning with mokopuna. Building Confidence, resilience

Cultural respect, enrichment, and our future

If you care for someone you care about what is important to them.

It's an official language.

To celebrate te reo and continue the revival!

I myself am from Ngāti rangitihi. For me personally my culture is so important to me. I didn't grow up learning much about it because my māori side of the family were distant and confusing. Therefore I never gained the opportunity to see my marae, learn or be brought up amongst my culture. However I decided to do it for myself. I competed at competitive kapa haka in secondary schools. I planned a visit to my marae up north. I contacted possible whānau to help me learn. And I also study Māori at school and have been for the last 4 years.

It's all too easy to live my life as a Pākeha ignoring Māori language entirely. My friends and family generally have, we feel like it's somehow not 'for' us. But I've recently had my eyes opened - keeping te reo Māori alive is the duty and privilege of ALL New Zealanders! I want to be part of the reason it survives and thrives, not part of the reason it sinks into obscurity.

Maori is important to New Zealand. It is from here in NZ. We need to protect the Maori language. If we can keep it going for now and try to keep alive, the Maori language might just stay on this planet. It is up to us, Kiwis to keep this amazing language alive. If we can all particapate in this Maori week every year we might just do it.

The importance of recognising our traditional language and acknowledging where part of my family is form.

I have just started my personal Te Reo Māori journey through Te Wānaga o Raukawa, and Te Wiki o te Reo Māori is a great reminder for me to keep going in my mahi! Karawhiua!

I am a student in occupational therapy a learning how important it is to preserve and use tikanga and traditions, language and healthcare for tangatawhenua. I come from a bicultural family and i am deepening my roots through education around nz history.

my teacher said

I often feel ignorant and really want to learn and understand more. It’s a beautiful language and holds such meaning.

It is important to learn and keep the language alive for the other generations to come. It is a language that makes New Zealand us.

I just think this is a really awesome way to try and reignite or bring back the language that was once taken from us

Currently on a journey of learning Te Reo

A proud New Zealander of many generations but am embarrassed that I can not pronounce words and only know the meaning a very few.

Kia Ora. . . Te Reo should be a natural part of our learning throughout school/university and life. It’s our absolute duty to ensure it’s continuation for all New Zealander’s.

I want to be able to be a part of Aotearoa society. To do this I need to speak Te Reo!

I have lived in NZ for 5 years and believe that this in an important part of being a citizen, not just on paper but really feeling a sense of belonging. It is not only respectful but interesting to understand Māori customs and protocols.

So that I can learn and be more confident in speaking Te Reo

It's a part of New Zealand culture and important to encourage everyone to learn and share Te Reo. I have two nephews who are Maori and I want to be able to communicate with them in Te Reo.

As one of the official languages of Aotearoa, I feel an obligation and responsibility to acknowledge and engage with te reo Māori on an everyday basis, as part of our culture in 2020 and beyond.

To be part of Aotearoa's journey of decolonisation

To get people speaking and understanding Te Reo

The people we support are passionate about culture and music.

The Maori language is important for New Zealand because it is the language of tangata whenua. I am of Samoan descent, and married to a descendant from Ngati Koroki Kahukura. We have 2 children, and I walked with them on their journey at Kohanga Reo, Kura Kaupapa Maori and Turakina Maori Girls College. Aotearoa's history is based on the tangata whenua, and we as New Zealanders should keep the language alive for our children and generations to come.

Its important to grow and strengthen our language as it is uniquely ours not only as Maori but as New Zealanders. It helps with the identity of our rangatahi and promotes being proud of who we are and what our ancestors have fought for over the years.

I am interested in Maori culture and am keen to learn more about it. I am passionate about learning about history and culture. This would also help me be more aware. It is important for me as I can then act accordingly in the community.

i want to learn more

Why not?. . . daughter got our whānau involved.

Making New Zealand my new home, I would like to be part of its culture. :-)

Because I think it's very important to keep this beautiful language alive and it's important to who we are as a nation.

Ko Aotearoa tenei, to tatou ahurei motuhake. Matou kene whakarangatira i o taatau me o taatau hitori, tikanga me nga reo. This is New Zealand, our special uniqueness. We can enrich our lives with our history, practices and languages.

I'm in my second year of learning te reo Māori, along with my husband and this is good practice to encourage us to use it. We're both Pākehā and believe it is important for us all to know some reo, and along with the Māori culture. I want to encourage others to learn, whoever they are.

We are a school that practices Waiata and Reo daily and also have an immersion class.

By making Maori language a part of my everyday life, I hope to strengthen my understanding of tikanga Maori and confirm my credentials to be a Kiwi.

To ensure that te reo is maintained and passed on to future generations to continue on this path.

It the language of my people

I have let my knowledge of Te Reo slide in the years since school so it is time to get back into it.

Have a voice.

I have been on a journey to learn te reo Māori for the last five years. My commitment is to keep going as long as I live. I hear my father behind me, urging me to speak more. He always put the effort in and I remember interactions he had in Tūranga-nui a Kiwa. When he died his body was taken to a mārae. I felt the honour for him. None of us could speak for him in Māori. My journey takes me through embarrassment and so much shame. I often find it hard to remember and I still don't roll my rs and get my pronunciation 100%, but each year I get more confident. Each year the pattern becomes more embedded, each year I learn more and more. It is a taonga.

need to keep te reo maori alive.

Enjoy learning te reo would love to learn more n want to include as much te reo as i can in everyday korero to give me more and more confidence! !

I have lived in New Zealand for nearly 20 years and I feel the need to appreciate the land, the people and culture more by learning about it.

Te Reo is part of our nations heritage and I don't know much Te Reo

Because Te Reo is an important part of New Zealand. Here is my Speech which won first place in Whakatane Intermediate School's Speech Comp: WHACK, Don’t you say Kia Ora in my school! WHACK, Maori is not allowed Rangi! My great grandmother’s first language was te reo Maori but sadly she was caned in school for speaking her reo. Consequently, my nan, my mum and now I have fallen victim to not having our language, our birthright. Did you know that according to the last census in 2013, of the Maori surveyed, only 22% said they could hold a basic conversation about everyday things in te reo? Shocking aye? Did you also know that Te Reo Maori only became an official language in Aotearoa in 1987? Yes, 1987! That is why today I am here to tell you why it is critically important that te reo Maori be a compulsory subject in all New Zealand schools! But how will I convince you this? Well, learning Te Reo Maori is important for our whakawhanaungatanga - our connection, learning a language has been proven to make you more intelligent and finally, it’s the only way to keep our language alive! So firstly, Te Reo Maori enables our connection to our past, our whakapapa and each other. It enables a connection to our Tikanga. Many New Zealand schools teach lots of different languages like Chinese, Spanish, and Japanese but these languages originate from other countries. Te Reo Maori is indigenous to New Zealand so why don’t all schools teach this? Spreading the teaching of Te Reo will strengthen the knowledge of Tikanga so that we don’t lose our identity. Learning Te Reo Maori in schools will also help people use it every day, whether in this country or not. Secondly, I’m sure all of us would like to become smarter by learning a new language like Te Reo Maori. Nathan Mikaere Wallis, A Brain Scientist has even said ‘Learning the language of your ethnicity has been proven to help you in the long run with things like everyday problems’. E-Tangata News also said ‘The Māori language needs to be compulsory in New Zealand schools so that future generations of New Zealand children can benefit from the cognitive advantages and academic benefits of being bilingual’ See what I mean? It makes you brainy! Finally, how are we supposed to keep the language alive if we don’t use it?! It’s up to you, and me our future generations to ensure our language doesn’t become extinct. We only need to look over the ditch to our aboriginal friends and see how they went from over 800 different native dialects to now only 13. But how do we keep our te reo alive? Well, we make sure that every New Zealand child in every New Zealand school from pre-school to Year 13 has exposure to basic teaching of everyday phrases in Te Reo Maori. Things like, “Kia Ora”, “Kei te pehea koe?”, “No hea koe?” Well, I can see on your faces that I’ve hit you hard… Also, before I go, Every year in Maori Language Week we always embrace the language a lot more than we normally would through the news, radio, school work and other things around our community. How about we have Maori Language Week EVERY WEEK? Te Manu e kai I te miro, nona te ngahere. Te Manu e kai I te matauranga, nona te ao. Kia Ora. - Lincoln

Revitalisation and recognition of Māori culture in NZ

Kia Ora it's honouring and a blessing to be part of this moment. . . . . . . . "Te Wa Tuku Reo Maori" as it is now a great opportunity for me to give thanks and praise our tangata whenua who have been and gone and left us with greater responsibilities to lead, teach and learn as much as we can in preparation for the next generation or movement. Let us either speak, read, play or sing in te reo Maori as our way of serving and growing . Nga Mihi Mahana

If we grown understanding and knowledge of te reo and tikanga Maori it helps us all to better understand what is unique about New Zealand, and our place in that.

Keeping the reo alive = keeping the culture alive = a reminder of the whakapapa and history of this nation

To learn te reo maori

I've always loved listening to Maori language, te reo, being spoken and admired those who do. Maybe I can be one of the million, it feels good to be part of a group with this aim in mind. Spread the aroha, spread the word!

Its important to acknowledge the maori language and culture. I want to learn more about the history of NZ through maori language.

I wish I could have had this opportunity when i was at school and would have loved my children to have the option in their schooling too. so I do this for my Moko

Would love my kids to be able to speak their mother tongue

The importance of embracing our indigenous culture & language here in Aotearoa!

Encouraging language is important.

Te reo Maori is unique to NZ and the indigenous language. It is our duty as true Kiwis to promote it.

It is so important to keep the Maori culture and language alive for the next generation, I have 5 tamariki my partner is Maori and I have studied tikanga and te reo so I am able to uphold our children's culture in our home