More than Māori Language Week required for a full partnership
Embargoed until Tuesday 5th September
The Equality Network (EN) is calling for the Government to commit to a full partnership between Māori and the Crown to
fulfil the promise of Te Tirīti - which means more than promoting Māori Language Week once a year.
Members of the Network, a non-partisan organisation of 37 members united by the vision of the a vision of a more equal
Aotearoa New Zealand, say that the Government must commit to fulfilling its obligations under Te Tirīti.
Anaru Fraser, Kaiwhakahaere Matua-General Manager of Hui E! Community Aotearoa says that the presence of Te Reo Māori is
just one way that we can honour Te Tirīti, and the level of te reo spoken in the community indicates genuine engagement
and partnership. “It shows a practical outcome of commitment to the Treaty of Waitangi.”
Fraser, who hails from Hauraki, also states that we need to ensure that citizen participation in government processes
for Māori, and all citizens, includes genuine engagement and partnership with those government agencies. He says
Government needs to widen its scope to progress the 17 global sustainable development goals that our Government signed
up to in September 2015, including goals focusing on gender equality; peace, justice and strong institutions; climate
action; reduced inequalities; and sustainable cities and communities. “If we want to steadily increase wellbeing,
stability and hope for all we must find ways to ensure the government knows what we stand for.”
EN Member UNICEF National Advocacy Manager, Dr. Prudence Stone, says moves like Māori Language Week are positive, and is
calling for expand the initiative to teach te reo in all schools across the country, as a key step towards honouring Te
Tirīti. “The more reo is learnt and spoken in our workforces, our marketplaces, as well as our homes, the more Māori
worldview deepens the New Zealand culture across its everyday life. Te reo should be taught in every school, and this
starts with professional training for every teacher.”
Dr. Stone, who is also a member of He Mana tō ia Tamaiti/Every Child Counts says honouring Te Tirīti will allow whānau
and iwi to use their resources invest in their own communities, improving the wellbeing of young children. “Iwi that
have settled are able to move on and initiate investment in their communities, lifting families into long term
prosperity. It is vital that settlement of all Te Tirīti claims are a priority of Crown and Government to ensure all iwi
can return to an equitable capital investment base as soon as possible.”
She says there are many simple solutions to ensuring that Te Tirīti is honoured including; asking questions when new
policy is made, such as whether decisions will affect Māori’s equal status and rights as citizens; considering whether
programmes and services will operate in ways that respect cultural practices and beliefs; and providing adequate Māori
inclusion and participation in governance including adequate board representation, partnership and consultation with
tribal councils. “We have to start with whanaungatanga [relationship building] with the mana whenua [Māori who hold the
mana of an area]. Once good relationship are formed it’;s about letting mana whenua know what decisions are getting
made, then listening carefully for the way they see decision-making could work.”
Contributor to the Equality Network, and Gisborne District Councillor, Josh Wharehinga says that as a society we need to
be looking beyond Māori Language Week to honour Te Tirīti. He says there are clear, embedded biases in our system that
prejudice Māori that need to be addressed. “The manifestation of these biases are apparent in the poor Māori statistics
in every field; health, justice, education, language and so on. There are many things that reinforce these biases but
they can all be traced up to the establishment of our laws.”
Wharehinga, who is of Te Aitanga a Mahaki, Ngāti Porou, Rongowhakaata, Te Arawa and Ngāti Wai descent insists that our
legislative processes need to go under the microscope. He says that one solution could be to establish an Upper House
made up of 50 percent Māori representatives and 50 percent Crown representatives. “Their job would be to review any new
laws coming through to make sure they are fair for all. They’d have to power to kick back those laws to the house of
Representatives to rework. This way we can ensure that the rules are fair and just for all, and that these past sins
that breached Te Tirīti will no longer be repeated.”
ends