Massey Debate Puts Te Reo Māori on Election Agenda
Massey University Debate puts te reo Māori on the
election agendaNew Zealand First was
forced to defend its te reo Māori policies on last
night’s televised debate ‘Te Reo Anamata’, hosted by
Māori Television’s Native Affairs and Massey University,
Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa. Five candidates lined up for the
bilingual debate, held on Massey’s Wellington campus, and
while all came with passion for te reo, it was New Zealand
First candidate, Pita Parone who faced some hard questions
over his party’s commitment. Mr Parone denied the recent
attack by New Zealand First leader Winston Peters on Māori
Party co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell for speaking te reo in
Parliament reflected a lack of commitment to the
language. “No, we’ve got to remember that the House is
a place of theatre and Winston is one of the most
experienced people in there and he knows how to get under
the Minister’s skin.” The debate quickly turned to the
issue of compulsion. Green candidate Jack McDonald told the
crowd the Greens were the only party bold enough to drive
the kaupapa of universal te reo in schools and he said it
would be one of the key priorities going into the election
and in post-election negotiations as well. “When we
released our plans early this year we were expecting the
division and blow back that you get from announcing a
compulsory te reo Māori subject, but actually we were
overwhelmed by the massive positive support, particularly
from Pākehā.” But National MP Jo Hayes said the
country was not ready for compulsion. “If we make it
compulsory people will push back and we can’t afford that.
I think that people have to be motivated to want to speak te
reo Māori and to have it taught to their children in
schools.”
Māori Party co-leader and cabinet Minister Te
Ururoa Flavell said his party supported a staged move toward
core curriculum status for the language. “We’re
committed but there’s no way in hell we’re going to have
enough teachers to deliver that tomorrow. “ Mr Flavell
said New Zealand needs a range of initiatives that support
te reo becoming a natural part of “being of this land and
of this place”. “I was one, who in the past, said
everyone learn te reo – if you’re not there, get off the
bus and go somewhere else. I’ve actually changed my
attitude now. We’ve got to take the whole country with
us.” Labour MP Adrian Rurawhe said while Labour was
committed to seeing te reo in schools, care had to be taken
with the language around policies. “When the general
public hear compulsory te reo Māori they’re hearing total
immersion, rather than a core curriculum subject. So, I
think there are a number of levels we can have within
schools …and we have to get our head around how that’s
going to work.” He said policies are needed that enable
te reo Māori to be learned by the wider community and that
would only happen by training more teachers. Mr Paraone
also claimed New Zealand First would concentrate on training
te reo Māori teachers. Massey University’s, Professor
Meihana Durie welcomed the parties’ commitments to
increasing teacher numbers. Professor Durie heads Te
Pūtahi-a-Toi which runs Kura Kaupapa Māori teacher
training programmes and he says attracting more teachers is
critical. “Te reo Māori is what distinguishes Aotearoa
from every other nation and society in the world. All New
Zealanders should have the opportunity to learn te reo and
the narratives, customs and traditions indigenous to these
lands. This year we had 11 teachers graduate from our Te Aho
Tātairangi programme, which bodes well for Kura Kaupapa
Māori, but if we were to resource all schools with enough
teachers to cope with any element of compulsion, we’d need
to upscale our current provision significantly. Ultimately,
it is the level of Government investment into teacher
training and the prioritisation of te reo that will
determine the capacity for these aspirations to be
realised” Māori Language Commmission, Te Taura Whiri i
te reo Māori, chief executive Ngahiwi Apanui said he felt
the debate was positive and showed political parties were
committed to te reo. “I think the appetite amongst
mainstream New Zealanders is that te reo Māori is something
we should hold on to, it’s something we should have as a
marker of our own specific identity and I think the
politicians are hearing that call.” Mr Apanui said a
recent report commissioned by Te Taura Whiri recommended
that te reo Māori be made a core compulsory subject over 17
years, starting in 2020, and he’s challenged all political
parties to commit to the target.
The debate will be
aired on Māori Television at 8pm tonight and further video
commentary will be available post the debate on the
Māori@massey facebook
page.
ENDS