Symposium To Carve Inspiring Future For Māori
Māori community leaders from across Aotearoa will join
students and academics in Ōtautahi Christchurch this
weekend to explore how knowledge from the past can be
harnessed to transform the future.
The
inaugural Māori Futures Symposium is being hosted by the
University of Canterbury (UC), in partnership with Tokona Te
Raki - The Māori Futures Collective with support from Ngā
Pae o Te Māramatanga (New Zealand’s Māori Centre of
Research Excellence).
Symposium Co-convenor and UC Head of School Aotahi: Māori and Indigenous Studies Sacha McMeeking (Ngāi Tahu) says the event aims to share knowledge and models of Māori social transformation to inspire current generations to create an ambitious road map for the future.
“Across the motu (country),
Māori are pioneering transformative work, using innovative
kaupapa Māori methods. We want to celebrate, promote, and
build our collective understanding of how to build the
future, by Māori, for Māori, as
Māori.
“We believe ancestral
knowledge contains the map for creating stronger collective
futures. We aim to share insights from pūkenga (experts),
practitioners, grassroots activists and
leaders.”
The symposium has more than 100
registered delegates and renowned guest speakers, including
Tā Tipene O’Regan (UC Adjunct Professor and former
chairman of the Ngāi Tahu Māori Trust Board), Tokona te
Raki – Māori Futures Collective Executive Director Dr
Eruera Tarena (Symposium Co-convenor), award-winning
Stuff Pou Tiaki Editor Carmen Parahi, actor and
mental health advocate Rob Mokaraka, Māori Party President
Che Wilson, and Professor
Angus Macfarlane.
Professor
Macfarlane, who will give a keynote address, was last week
named
a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the
Queen’s Birthday honours for his services to
education, psychology and Māori.
The Symposium is also an opportunity for alumni of UC’s Māori Master of Māori and Indigenous Leadership (MMIL) programme to reunite. The weekend’s agenda includes a new award, the Ati Rau - Be a Good Ancestor Award, presented by Puata Hou Ltd Director Bentham Ohia to an outstanding current MMIL student or graduate on Saturday.
Unique in New
Zealand, the MMIL degree began in 2017 and is an applied
professional programme dedicated to supporting the
advancement of Māori and indigenous
self-determination.
MMIL Programme Director Liam Grant (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Porou) says the Symposium is an opportunity for MMIL alumni, Māori post graduate students, community practitioners, researchers and scholars to connect and recharge. “This will be an amazing platform for our dynamic community to come together united by our dedication to bringing positive change.”
In the
lead-up to the Symposium a group of MMIL students are taking
part in a one-week haerenga (tour) of significant sites for
Māori, including Kerikeri and the Waitangi Treaty Grounds,
Wairoa, and
Parihaka.