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Update16 Sep, 2020
"I feel like Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori has run parallel to my own pursuit of Tikanga Māori"
...it's about more than optics or the colour of your skin. It's what you feel inside rather than how you look outside that matters most. I've gained the greatest confidence in being a Māori journalist by embarking on a Te Reo journey. And it is a journey with many stops and starts along the way.
Update11 Sep, 2020
"They leave a legacy"
"No infantry had a more distinguished record, or saw more fighting, or, alas, had such heavy casualties, as the Māori Battalion." The tūpāpaku of Epineha Ratapu will be mourned at Rangimarie Marae in Whakaoriori tomorrow, before being taken back to Tokomaru on Sunday.
Update06 Sep, 2020
Stone said there were a range of reasons soldiers never received medals
"One of the reasons that I got from one of the children of these soldiers is that it was a tikanga issue. Soldiers felt as though the medals needed to be presented to them face to face, kanohi ki te kanohi, but the policy of the time was that you...
Update01 Sep, 2020
Moss & Sampson are concerned that other Māori staff members might leave after Prof Hokowhitu leaves
Moss says, “What we’re worried about is the future of our faculty and what the future of education looks like for Māori within Waikato and the quality of education that people are going to get if they come to Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato.”
Update28 Aug, 2020
Do not allow yourself to be mokai to another.
In earlier times, in the rūnanga, you could present your view, for instance, about whether to go to war against another tribe. Others would listen, absorb your perspective and then go away. There was no pressure to make a decision on the spot. This...
Update16 Aug, 2020
Moataane said closing Ngāti Rangi's borders will safeguard the community.
“We have a duty to protect and care for our community and we are encouraging local authorities to step up and do the same. Closing our borders will eliminate the risk completely. It’s a no brainer and we don’t know why it hasn’t happened already. It’s not good enough."
Update15 Aug, 2020
This govt has been light on advocacy for Māori when it clashes with the philosophy of universalism
In 2020 we still have many of the conditions which led to the appalling death rate of almost 5% of all Māori from influenza in 1918-19. We are still dealing with systemic racism, the underprovision of health services in areas where Māori live, material poverty, and the consequences of the state-led destruction of our health-protective factors – language, land, culture, resources, whānau.