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'

Te Reo is a very interesting language in itself with unique features in its particles, word formation, tenses.

Our tamariki are the reason we are participating. Their enthusiasm to learn anything Kaupapa Maori weather it be a song, reading a book or responding to a teachers request or instruction. Our tamariki learn best from repetition so we keep it basic, hei ako pai nga kaiako me nga tamariki.

Because I am 40yr old wahine Māori and learning with my 4 year old.

I have links to the Basque country and to Wales. Their languages have had a resurgence in both countries following bans and their use being frowned upon. Now the kanguages are used in schools and most kids speak their native tongue. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if it were the same here. I really hope so, one day.

To try carry on our reo for the many generations after us . . .

I believe we are one country and one people and we expect Māori to speak English so why should European or others within Aotearoa not speak Te Reo Māori. It’s a beautiful language and if it is around in daily news, signs etc. we can all embrace it.

Sharing the beauty of te reo with othersRighting the wrongs of the past suppression of te reo in Aotearoa - and letting it all hang out! Karawhuia! Supporting Tino Rangatiratanga in Aotearoa. Being a role model for other pākehā that it is exciting to be a learner of te reo. Te reo enriches all our lives. Improving my own beginners te reo. Supporting the creative and important work of Te Taurawhiti. It's a positive and exciting thing to do at this troubled time in the country and the world.

I love the language and general philosophy of Mannakitanga and thing Māori

Ko te reo Māori te reo o te whenua nei!

a growing realisation that we need to make more of our Maori history in the Mackenzie District - learn more - acknowledge more!

Nā te mea, he tino taonga Te Reo.

I never had the reo growing up even though both my parents are fluent. I want my kids to be fluent speakers and te reo maori to be the first language for all future kids. Goal is to make our whare anake te reo maori by end of 2021

I believe our learning experience is limitless

I think as New Zealander's, regardless of our ethnicity, we have a responsibility to learn te reo and help keep the language and culture of our tangata whenua alive and thriving.

I would like to be alive to see the day when the whole of Aotearoa speak te reo Maori

Why - I want Te Reo to be commonplace, normalised and for everyone to appreciate the beautiful language it is. The connection and meaning that come alongside Te Reo are something everyone should experience and be exposed to.

We didn't grow up speaking Te Reo Maaori. I was an adult when my journey began. I have a 10 year old, and 5 years ago we made the decision for her to attend kura kaupapa. I also made a commitment to reo and to speak it in the house. I am still studying reo / he tauira au I te reo maaori. My why is our tamariki and mokopuna, so that they grow up knowing who they are.

For my tamariki!

I work in a kaupapa Maori organisation and want to increase my day to day use of Te Reo

I work in a kaupapa Maori organisation and want to increase my day to day use of Te Reo

E hiahia ana ahau ki te tipu haere i tāku pūkenga i te Reo Māori - ko te reo rangatira.

I was learning te reo in the decades past but have had less opportunity to korero since retiring. But I do know a fair bit, just lack practice forming sentences. I often listen to Te Karere and Maori TV channel too. Years ago when I was a student nurse, my Ngapuhi flatmate would not teach me, but told me to keep listening to Te Karere. I trained as a nurse in Rotorua where I had many Maori friends and used to go up to Motatau with my friend, whose father used to tell us the old stories (history) in the evenings by the fire. No TV back then. I also had a lot to do with the family of Hone Te Kauru Taiapa and his wife Mereira at Koutu. They are like family to me but the parents are long passsed. I am in touch with some of their descendants who are very inclusive. I studied nursing papers and psychology at Massey in Palmerston North and in 1990 was unemployed and went again to Massey, but fulltime and did Treaty of Waitangi in NZ Society with Mason DURIE. He also invited me to do his Maori Health paper, for which he handpicked 10 students only. He took me to Ratana to a great health hui, where I met many fine people there including a young Lance O'Sullivan about to embark on a medical degree. He was in our group and a speaker too. I had been to Ratana years before in childhood with my parents too. In 1992 I was doing the paper Te Kakano o Te Reo. But now I am very rusty and need to get busy on it again. The Whakapara people are also very inclusive, that is the marae of Titewhai Harawira and I know quite a few of her family as her next oldest sister is married to my cousin. I see our PM Jacinda is becoming very accomplished at te reo and watched her spek at Ngaruawahia today for the big celebrqaations there. aShe is so clever qqnd a great example to many to have a go and keep at it as we all must learn to preserve this beutiful laanguage. Aileen McKay

I am pakeha, and te reo is part of who I am

Learning te ao and te reo Maori is a commitment I feel I should make as a New Zealander.

I accepted a job that moved me from the US to NZ two years ago. Whilst I moved because of my career, I wanted the experience of living in and embracing a culture different from my own, and that includes Maōri culture and language. To that end, I’ve been working on learning Te Reo Maōri and incorporating words and phrases in my everyday life.

Improving and expanding my Reo helps me connect with my whakapapa and expand my Māori world view

It is part of me that has been suppressed for far too long and I want it to be a part of my everyday life, as well as my sons. It's important to me that my son doesn't grow up with the disconnect or feeling of something missing like I did growing up in Tamaki in a mainly pakeha household

He taonga te Reo! Kei te hiahia au ki te whakatenatena i ngā tāngata katoa ki te ako i te Reo Māori. Ko te tumanako, ka rangona te Reo i ngā wāhi puta noa i te motu.

So I can understand more about Maori - te reo and tikanga. So I can feel more connected to Aotearoa and what we are as a nation and people.

It is important to be able to communicate clearly to every person in Aotearoa.

Because Te Reo is part of here and only here so we should all embrace it! And its ataahua!

Because through us the ancestors speak

This is an Awesome Kaupapa! Hiahia au ki te tautoko 👌🏼

Ko te reo Māori tōku hoa haere ia rā. Kia kaha tonu tatou ki te kōreo i

Tena koe, I work in Iwi Radio and have done for many years and keen as to tautoko this amazing kaupapa. Everyday I'm around Te Reo Maori and Maori Waiata but am still a learning just having the basics and have a passion to learn more. More so for my mahi at Nga Iwi FM but also as the first Maori elected councillor for the Hauraki District Council. It's a new challenge for me but an area I'd like to have input into the council not only with local town name pronounciation bit also getting them to understand tikanga and kawa. Growth and knowledge of us as Maori. A personal project for me is to get Maori enrolled and engaged plus an understanding how the Local Government world works. Thank you and have a good weekend.

Equity and fairness

Me tautoko te reo Maori. Ko matua tipuna pakeha tōku e kōrero i te reo Maori no reira Ka ako au I kōrero hoki. Whai hoki Ko ngaa pakeha e patu te reo maaori. Ko pakeha au. Me whakahoki te reo .

to korero maori more than korero english.

I want to connect to my language and learn more. I want to encourage others to learn Te Reo Maori

Maori is the indigenous language of Aotearoa and we should ensure our children have the opportunity to learn to speak fluently.

Te reo Māori is more than a national language - it's the heart language of our nation, part of what makes us who we are. I want to do my part to make sure te reo Māori thrives, now and in the future.

I studied Te Reo at college but that was now nearly 20yrs ago so would like to start using it more often, my youngest son also attends Kohanga Reo & actively speaks & understands Te Reo so i would like him to keep it up so it becomes second nature to him.

who doesnt want to hear more of this beautiful language : )

He Taonga te reo Mãori

Toku reo toku ohooho toku reo toku mapihi maurea toku reo toku whakakai marihiLove being on the Te Reo Maori JourneyMauri ora

Yes ko Tania Castle-Prime tenei , , kapai tenei korero me te kai korero maori Ataahua

To educate those in our wider community of the existence of Te Ao Māori!

Hiringa is a Māori word meaning perseverance, energy, determination, inspiration, vitality. Our team is made up of energy professionals from all around the globe with a wide range of accents. Out of respect for the Māori culture - the Iwi and Hapu that we liaise with along our journey to zero emissions, we have chosen to participate in Māori language week, by further educating our team on the indigenous language of New Zealand.

I have lost my reo due to society and I want to reinforce it more within my whānau for my whānau and for Māori.

To be a part of the Te reo Maori movement

Would love expand my knowlesge in the reo. Applying it every day in the workplace in my home to my friends

Ahakoa he Pākehā ahau, ka aroha ahau i te reo. Ki oku whakaaro, mēnā ka taea te nuinga o ngā tangata te kōrero, ka ora te motu katoa.

E ngakaunui ana ahau ki ō tātou reo Māori me te whakaora i tō tātou reo.

I'm participating because I know it takes multiple generations to get our reo back. My grandparents spoke fluently, but my father doesn't and I have so much yet to learn and so little time. I need to do my part so that my mokopuna can be fluent speakers of their reo. I'm not able to study the way I would like to in order to reclaim my reo, so participating where I can is one way I can play a little part in the resurgence and growth of the use of te reo Māori in Aotearoa.

Because Te Reo is a beautiful language which should be celebrated and spoken

My why. . I have a young family. I want my children and I to learn te reo Maori. Maori is a part of who we are. Unfortunately neither myself or my children are fluent in te reo Maori and I want to change that.

We moved to Australia nearly 3 years ago. Being away from our whanau and home has made us more aware of how much we had and miss! ! Participating to learn and connect and as an act of pride in who we are🌸

Because for a language to flourish, it needs to be spoken.

Te Reo Maori is so important - for keeping the language and the culture alive, and it's an important thing for pakeha to learn in order to gain a deeper understanding of Aotearoa's history.

I wish NZ history was different but if anywhere can turn the damage of colonisation around we can. This my small part to play in a much bigger team effort. If the Treaty had been honoured, we would all be fluent in te reo Māori. When you know better do better. Thank you 🙏

I want to keep up with my bicultural teaching practice!

I regret that I have lived in Aotearoa all my life and can still only korero and understand a smattering of Te reo. Please start making it compulsory for everyone even just for a basic learning.

I am of ngati mamoe descent. My great grandmother raised her children to live in a white world, as she saw how much easier it would be for them. Because of this, two generations later, we are disconnected from our culture and our language. I want to reconnect so that future generations will know and love their culture and where they come from.

Want to be able to speak fluently

We should absolutely celebrate Aotearoa's indigenous language, the more people actively participating in learning this incredible and complex language the better we become.

Because I live in Aotearoa!

Our organisation is committed to making te reo an everyday part of all NZers experience! !

I think te reo Maori is important because it is the first language of this country. It should be used more often, not just during Maori language week

Ko te reo Māori te reo o Aotearoa. E noho ana au i tēnei kainga, koirā e hiahia ana au te tautoko te reo tuatahi o Aotearoa. Ehara he tangata Māori, he pākehā kē, engari ka nui tōku aroha mō tēnei motu, mō ngā taiao, mō ngā tangata whenua hoki. He waka eke noa. Tihei mauri ora!

I have emigrated to NZ over 23 yrs ago. I am still at the same school and LOVE it! When I arrived here, the 2 Maori teachers would sing and speak Maori (always Maori, English, Maori). That's how I learnt many phrases. I have a head like a sieve, so can't remember well, however, over the years, our school has always been open to promoting Maori. I have been taking the Y7 for Te Reo (2019, 2020) - only doing the school pepeha, our moteatea and a karakia. I've taught our, mainly P I students the way I would learn & remember. I've taught it alongside the English meaning. My experience is of kids saying the karakia with zero meaning or understanding. I don't like ticking boxes for the sake of it. Now, I listen to Maori on TV and there are so many more words that i understand, getting the gist of what they're saying. The English sub-titles help. We teach the meaning of our carvings, & the history of our school (Maori version). Being a history student and coming from a highly politicised country, i push the Treaty too, because there's too much lit-service paid, . . . however, that's another issue.

I am Maori and live in London. It would be lovely to share my language with my family and friends.

I have been living in NZ for 10 years now, and have been learning and using Te Reo for 3 years. I'm not that good, but I try to use your language as I think it's important to keep Te Reo active and growing in NZ.

Be more part of the community of children I teach by learning more te Reo. Be able to say the opening karakia of the day well at the centre I am currently at.

i am maori as a child my father was worried about teaching us. so to make him proud and my grandparents proud i am learning myself and teaching my children also beacuse it is important to me and my whanau uto know our history

Te Reo is such a taonga, I started learning it then I stopped, I want to get back into learning again, and carry on again!

Because power should be returned to tangata whenua.

I really want to korereo better, having confidence with what I sayI went to Te Wananga o Aotearoa ki Otautahi about 3-5 years ago just want to be more confident. Kia Ora koutou

I'm Mexican and I've been in New Zealand for 7 years now. I have seen in my home country what it is like to lose our indigenous heritage and it's very sad. Language is culture. There is so much knowledge and wisdom embedded in language. I support this, I believe this is important and I want to contribute to this. I am learning :)

to show people what it means and how to say it

I am a hospital play specialist in Whangarei Hospital , I would like to challenge myself to include a lot of Te Reo within my work environment to reflect the culture and language of tamariki and whanau that I work with.

We are privileged to be living in a multicultural society and I’d like to honour that by learning to speak te reo.

Te Reo is our taonga as a country. It is unique and special to us, a part of our past, present and future. I am not Māori and was not brought up learning any, which makes me sad to think what I have missed out on. I don't want the same to happen to the tamariki in our schools.

My husband is part Maori but unfortunately doesn’t have a lot to do with his heritage which as of recent has saddened me. We have a 2 year old boy name Marlo Arri Anaru Winitana. I want him to know where he has come from. His roots. I would love to expand my knowledge and vocabulary.

Honour the Treaty and respect Indigenous peoples, land, history and culture. Kia ora! ! !

Te Reo is beautiful, it's an official language of our country - we should all speak it!

Maori represents a rich heritage of New Zealand, and as someone who is new to this country and going to live in this country for long, i would like to learn the language as a respect and my commitment for this beautiful country.

I’m a pakeha psychiatrist. Many of my patients are Maori. For me, learning Te Reo is part of being a better doctor.

To honour my tipuna wahine.

We have a school kaiarahi who has developed over the past six years a programme of learning of Te Reo ma tikanga Maori, at each year level. We are invested in lifting the achievement of our Maori students and recognising the importance of Te Reo Maori ma tikanga Maori as part of our bilingual and bi cultural heritage. We are a very multicultural school and it is important that all cultures within our school have their heritage valued but also recognise and can participate in New Zealand's bi cultural heritage. By participating, we can show that we support the cause for all New Zealanders to be not only bi lingual but to have an understanding of Te Ao Maori.

Its my whakapapa

I am on my reo Māori journey and one of the main things i have learnt in the last 10 years is that whatever we have and learn we need to learn so we know it and then we need to share it! ! This is the opposite from what i felt when growing up. That our reo was to be kept on a pedostol and kept safe. I love helping people understand and grow in our reo!

I was born in 1959. My Mother was Ngati Maniapoto and my Father was from England. Te reo Maori was shunned in the 1970s but my English Dad encouraged us to korero Maori and attempted to himself. It is our taonga and it is our right to korero Maori

Ka puta mai te kakano i ruia mai ngā rangiatea.

I think it’s important the indigenous language and culture of our country are honoured and respected.

I've learned a couple of non-English languages, but haven't made a similar effort to learn te reo. I've learned plenty of words by hearing and reading them used by other people, but couldn't hold even a simple conversation. I want to start actively learning, with an eventual goal of being able to hold a simple conversation.

Because Te reo Māori is beautiful and should be a language learnt, celebrated, loved and normalised as an everyday language spoken by all whom call Aotearoa home.

Being a pakeha New Zealander it is important for me to have some ability to speak some te reo to try and have a greater understanding of tangata whenua. Maori is a beautiful language.

There is no reason not to.

I started Te Reo class in March, Level 1 and 2 at our local Te Wananga O Aotearoa. Initially, I was very nervous and actually thought, I couldnt do it, but with the encouragement from my children and fellow classmates, I have thoroughly enjoyed and after completing 3x Aromatawai, Im feeling alot more confident. If anything, my Why more so, from stems from my initial thoughts, Why Not? Our language is beautiful and the more I hear it spoken, the more I want to learn and be able to share with my kids and others.

Ko Te reo Maori Te reo rangatira