MÄori iwi (tribe) in Aotearoa New Zealand
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Every Monday to start our week off on here Nights, we invite a guest on the show to share a whakataukī - a Maori proverb - that's meaningful to them. Tonight we're talking to Roimata Smail (Ngāti Maniapoto, Tainui).
Brady Peeti (Te Āti Haunui-a-Pāpārangi, Ngāti Maniapoto) joined Sofia in the studio to speak about "What Happened to Mary-Anne?" - a story of trans woman Mary-Anne and her insatiable adoration for the power of rock. The show is on at the Q Theatre Loft from 11th-15th February. You can get your tickets here!
Brady Peeti (Te Āti Haunui-a-Pāpārangi, Ngāti Maniapoto) joined Sofia in the studio to speak about "What Happened to Mary-Anne?" - a story of trans woman Mary-Anne and her insatiable adoration for the power of rock. The show is on at the Q Theatre Loft from 11th-15th February. You can get your tickets here!
Moana Maniapoto joins Nicholas to chat about her latest musical project ONO.
Moana Maniapoto joins Nicholas to chat about her latest musical project ONO.
**Scroll down and give us a hand at the NZ Podcast awards** The wording of David Seymour's controversial Treaty Principles Bill will be revealed tomorrow – more than a week before originally planned – amid fierce criticism of the policy from the Waitangi Tribunal. ================================= Help us win another listeners choice award, entries close 27 November Head to https://www.nzpodcastawards.com/nominate Enter the podcast name BHN or Big Hairy News Link to the podcast is https://podcasts.apple.com/nz/podcast/bhn-big-hairy-news/id1629215711 ================================= Come support the work we're doing by becoming a Patron of #BHN www.patreon.com/BigHairyNews Merch available at www.BHNShop.nz Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/BigHairyNews Follow us on Twitter. @patbrittenden @Chewie_NZ
Kuini Ngā Wai Hono i te Po has ascended the throne, succeeding her father, the late Kiingi Tuheitia who was laid to rest on Thursday atop Taupiri Maunga. Māori studies professor Ella Henry (Ngātikahu ki Whangaroa, Ngāti Kuri, Te Rārawa), anthropology associate professor Marama Muru-Lanning (Waikato, Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Whātua) and Piripi Winiata (Ngāti Kahungunu) spoke to Corin Dann.
The Lord of the Rings film trilogy won 17 Academy Awards and its legacy endures nearly 25 years after the first film's release. The trilogy's success has put its filming location, New Zealand, on the industry map. The motion picture business contributes at least $2.12 billion a year to New Zealand's economy. That's also been a boon for Indigenous cinema. Māori film critic and programmer Leo Koziol calls it a “renaissance". The recent Māori-led film The Convert, directed by Lee Tamahori, is garnering critical acclaim. We'll talk with Koziol and hear from Māori creatives who worked on Lord of the Rings about progress on Māori representation in film since then. GUESTS Leo Koziol (Ngāti Kahungunu and Ngāti Rakaipaaka), founder of the Wairoa Māori Film Festival, Indigenous editor at Letterboxd, and a programmer for the New Zealand International Film Festival Lawrence Makoare (Ngāti Whātua), actor Hammond Peek (Ngāi Tahu and Te Āti Awa), sound recordist and production sound mixer Ra Vincent (Te Atiawa), production designer and artist Dr. Tom Roa (Ngāti Maniapoto, Waikato, Ngāti Apakura), Tainui leader and Ahorangi (professor) in the University of Waikato's Te Pua Wananga ki te Ao Māori and Indigenous Studies
FULL KŌRERO: Chapter 1 with Shiray KakaToday's episode features Olympic Gold Medalist, NZ Black Ferns Sevens star and social media superstar Shiray Kaka.From Moata'a in Samoa and Ngāti Maniapoto, Shiray is just cool to be around. Real chill, genuine and super talented - what's more impressive than her ability on field or her charismatic social media storytelling skills, has to be the love she has for her whānau - especially her husband Gillies, her dogs.... and butter. I'm not even joking lol.Enjoy the full conversation! Meitaki!Pat & LiamDREAM CHASERSFollow us on socials - hit the link below for where to go!CLICK HERE HOMIES
Malo! This 'Quick Kōrero' isn't as quick as they will normally be, cos' we do a bit of an intro yarn at the start. QUICK KŌRERO: Some of the best bits from each episode of Dream Chasers. Today's episode features Olympic Gold Medalist, NZ Black Ferns Sevens star and social media superstar Shiray Kaka. From Moata'a in Samoa and Ngāti Maniapoto, Shiray is just cool to be around. Real chill, genuine and super talented - what's more impressive than her ability on field or her charismatic social media storytelling skills, has to be the love she has for her whānau - especially her husband Gillies, her dogs.... and butter. I'm not even joking lol. Enjoy some of my favourite moments from our chat. Full version (it's long bro!) Will be online soon. Meitaki! Pat & Liam DREAM CHASERS Follow us on socials - hit the link below for where to go! CLICK HERE HOMIES
Five new moving image works have launched as part of Huarere: Weather Eye, Weather Ear, Te Tuhi's contribution to the global World Weather Network. Curated by Janine Randerson, the screening programme features the five latest sound and video commissions created by three artists: Jae Hoon Lee, Riki Pirihi, and Tia Bennett. One of the projects, Tūhononga (Cluster and Connection) Parts I and II by Tia Barrett (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Mamoe, Te Rapuwai, Waitaha, Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Tamainupō) explores the pūrākau (stories) from our past which we can draw on to benefit the future of our whenua. Sofia spoke to Tia about Tūhononga (Cluster and Connection) as well as Huarere: Weather Eye, Weather Ear in general.
Hēmi Kelly (Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Tahu-Ngāti Whaoa) is a Māori language consultant, teacher, and translator, and the voice behind podcast and social media movement Everyday Māori.
Dr Warahi (Ngāti Maniapoto) has just recently completed his studies at the University of Auckland on the experiences of Māori caregivers.
Moana Maniapoto's interview with National MP, Tama Potaka, was revealing as Tama's answers were often good and he often nailed the themes of Maoridom, and his understandings and beliefs were solid...the incongruency came when we also wanted to know if he has the 'right' answers. why do we see none of them represented in this current Government. ================================================ Come support the work we're doing by becoming a Patron of #BHN www.patreon.com/BigHairyNews Merch available at www.BHNShop.nz Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/BigHairyNews Follow us on Twitter. @patbrittenden @Chewie_NZ
Julia is the founder of Hā Habit. She knows all too well what it's like to be trapped by overwhelming feelings of stress and anxiety. Which is why she created the Hā tool, Aotearoa, New Zealand's #1 destress breathing tool. In this podcast, we kōrero about Julia's journey to where she is now, she offers practical tools which can help when you're feeling stressed and anxious and we touch on our te reo Māori journey, plus so much more! Julia was born and bred in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Her father is Māori, and they whakapapa to Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto, and Te Atihaunui-Ā-Pāpārangi. Julia's mother is Pākeha (half Dutch, part English, and Jewish). Julia loves to share what she learns. She obtained a Bachelor of Social Sciences, double majoring in Psychology and Human Resource Management so she could further develop her skills and empower others to move through their challenges. Part of Julia's journey led her to conscious breathing as a powerful tool for regulation and emotional healing. It has allowed her to gain more awareness of her thought patterns, behaviours, and actions. Knowing how to regulate the body for stress management is a key component of the Hā Habit. Having come across the concept of breathing necklaces, she knew this was a powerful way to develop breathing habits that can stick for life. She was inspired to create a New Zealand version and that's when the Hā tool was born. She also created an e-book which can help you to use the Hā tool effectively and address deeper issues of anxiety and stress. Her hope is to motivate you in doing the mental, emotional, and spiritual work that can assist in your healing. Get cosy and join us in The Soul Full Lounge x You can learn more about Julia and the Hā tool. https://www.hahabitnz.com/ www.facbook.com/hahabitnz www.instagram.com/hahabitnz
Let's go back again to the 160th anniversary of the battle of Ōrākau, where dignitiries have gathered to remember the most famous of the New Zealand Wars. The battle in 1864, which took place east of Kihikihi, involved Māori from Tūwharetoa, Tauranga Moana, Waikato, Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Raukawa and Tūhoe defending the site from more than a thousand British soldiers. About 160 Māori died, along with seventeen British troops. Reporter Pokere Paiwai spoke to Ingrid Hipkiss.
"A man who has only one plan may not succeed" is part of legendary journalist Moana Maniapoto's chosen whakataukī.
An amazing 40 minutes with Moana Maniapoto where we talk about everything from her musical career to her work now on Te Ao with Moana ================================================ Come support the work we're doing by becoming a Patron of #BHN www.patreon.com/BigHairyNews Merch available at www.BHNShop.nz Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/BigHairyNews Follow us on Twitter. @patbrittenden @Chewie_NZ
Moana Maniapoto joins us live at 9pm to talk 2023, what's to come in 2024 and "Mini Budget" Day It is "Mini Budget" day and we'll have a look over the biggest decisions and clarifications to come from it Health Minister Dr Shane Reti's iwi makes public appeal for him to stop the scrapping of smokefree laws ================================================ Come support the work we're doing by becoming a Patron of #BHN www.patreon.com/BigHairyNews Merch available at www.BHNShop.nz Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/BigHairyNews Follow us on Twitter. @patbrittenden @Chewie_NZ
New Zealand's political arena is more like a gladiator pit than a parliament, and we've got front-row seats to the latest skirmishes. My guests, Q+As Jack Tame, the ever-incisive Moana Maniapoto and the acerbically witty Damien Grant, join me to unpack the government's controversial plays. From the resurrection of high-octane firearms to the socio-economic chess game of tobacco taxation, we don't just throw punches – we analyze the impact of each policy swing. And when it comes to Winston Peters' media conspiracy theories, we're calling bluffs and taking names. But it's not all policy warfare; the home front is just as heated. As we navigate the housing crisis and pet bond propositions, we question the implications for Kiwi renters and homeowners alike. The appointment of Judith Collins draws scepticism and sparks debate, with the undercurrents of state-funded media and representation for Māori adding fuel to the fire. These conversations push us into the radical middle, where government intervention and free speech principles duel for dominance. We round out our session with a look ahead – and it's a horizon brimming with change. Public broadcasting's lifeline amidst a brutal advertising landscape, political shake-ups hinting at a Labour Party reshuffle, and the U.S. presidential race's potential for fresh faces all come under our microscope. And as we cast an international eye to Israel's strife, we find narratives of hope and resilience. This episode isn't just another political commentary; it's a call to engage, reflect, and challenge the status quo. So buckle up for a ride through the tumultuous yet hopeful terrain of New Zealand's political and social landscape. It's Politics done unlike anywhere else. The podcast broadcasts from our purpose built studio bunker ADJACENT to Mediaworks studios on YouTube & The Daily Blog and posted up afterwards on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Rova & YouTubeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
TONIGHT: The Working Group Election Special: What went wrong for the Left with Māori TV current affairs host Moana Maniapoto, Former Labour Party Chief of Staff Matt McCarten and Libertarian Darth Vader, Damien Grant Issue 1 – Labour – what the hell happened? Issue 2 – Greens celebrate but have lost power Issue 3 – Māori Party wins big and Issue 4 – Where to now for the Left? Next week we will review the Election for the Right with former National Party Leader Simon Bridges and ACT Leader David Seymour. It's Politics done unlike anywhere else. The podcast broadcasts from our purpose built studio bunker ADJACENT to Mediaworks studios on YouTube & The Daily Blog and posted up afterwards on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Rova & YouTube See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr Vasileios Stavropoulos, Academic and Clinical Psychologist at RMIT University, unpacks the rise of internet gaming addiction and explores the role of games in treating health conditions; Abe Ropitini, proud Māori man of Ngāti Kahungunu and Ngāti Maniapoto iwi with ancestral links to Palawa Country and Executive Director of Population Health at the Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (VACCHO), discusses the role of VACCHO and the impact that the Voice Referendum may have on indigenous health outcomes. With presenters Panel, Dr Dilemma, Dr Neo, and Dr Sharma.Website: https://www.rrr.org.au/explore/programs/radiotherapyFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/RadiotherapyOnTripleR/Twitter: https://twitter.com/_radiotherapy_Instagram: https://instagram.com/radiotherapy_tripler
Haylee Putaranui (Ngāti Maniapoto, Te Aitanga-a-Hauiti, Ngāti Pahauwera) is Fonterra's Pouhere, Director Māori Strategy. Prior to this she was the Global Lead for Diversity and Inclusion also at Fonterra. Becoming a Mum to Waiaria at 17 provided motivation to move through law school and into practise before joining Fonterra. Outside of mahi, Haylee has contributed to iwi governance roles and led parts of her iwi settlement with the Crown, a process which showed her from adversity and resilience can always come resolution and hope. This is episode is extra special and painted in bright colours – which is what you would expect when it comes to the fabulous Haylee. It is a conversation about the leadership we need for not just working parents but for everyone who loves and lives in this land. Haylee is one of the most generous people you will meet. Generous in spirt, generous in time and generous in wisdom. And it is all shared with a humour that will make you smile. We talk all things:Sharing other people's names in rooms that they are not in.How success is about how you grow others. The link between foggy glasses and air con units. Why you need to think about when you hold your team meetings.How men have so much to gain by smashing this system.Being “othered” when you announce your pregnancyThe importance of asking our people “how are you and how can I support you?”Real talk on sleep deprivation.Elevating DEI roles so they can have impact.Making performance reviews work for working parents.And putting a care wrap around parents for 4 years – sign me up!Resources DiscussedCindy Gallop – recommended to follow on LinkedIn – “I urge women to not look just for mentors but more importantly to find champions – those people that make shit happen for you”.Connect with EmmaThis podcast was funded by Works for Everyone, a business based in NZ and operating globally that supports working parents to stay in the leadership pipeline through coaching, workshops, and advocacy. Your host, Emma Mclean, is a mother of three teenagers, an Executive Coach and the Founder of Works for Everyone. Following a successful 25-year career in corporate marketing, Emma launched her business in 2019 to put a care wrap around working parents at the hardest time in their career. She is an ACC certified coach with the International Coaching Federation, the recipient of the 2022 Jaguar/Viva She Sets the Pace Community Grant, alumni of the 2021 NZ Leadership Programme, and a Swiftie (a lifelong Taylor Swift fan). To work with Emma or enquire about speaking – emma@worksforeveryone.co.nz www.worksforeveryone.co.nzhttps://www.instagram.com/worksforeveryone/https://www.linkedin.com/in/emma-mclean-9176217/
In this episode, we explore a kōrero between two people meeting for the first time.Āpera: Tēnā koe, e hoa.Hēmi: Kia ora, e hoa.Āpera: E pēwhea ana?Hēmi: Ā, heoi anō, ko taua āhua anō rā. Ā koe?Āpera: E ora ana. Ko Āpera tōku ingoa. Ko wai tō ingoa?Hēmi: Kia ora, Āpera. Ko Hēmi ahau. Nō konei koe?Āpera: I tipu ake ahau i konei, engari ko Te Āti Awa tōku iwi. Nō hea koe?Hēmi: Nō Ngāti Maniapoto ahau, engari i tupu ake ahau i Taihape. Ā, kua waru tau e noho ana ahau i Tāmaki Makaurau.Āpera: He aha tō mahi?Hēmi: He kaiako reo Māori ahau. He aha tāu?Āpera: He tauira ahau i te whare wānanga.Hēmi: Ko te aha tō kaupapa ako?Āpera: Ko te reo Māori.The Everyday Māori Podcast is supported by Te Mātāwai as a part of its contribution to Maihi Māori - Kia ūkaipō anō te reo. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode I travel to Otorohanga to visit Hiria Anderson-Mit-ah at her home and studio. Hiria is Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Apakura, Rereahu.Hiria graduated from Whitecliffe Collage of Design & Arts with an MFA, first class honours. Her work is held in numerous public and private collections, including the University of Auckland Art Collection, the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki and The Waikato Museum. She is represented by Tim Melville in Auckland and Page Galleries in Wellington.Sitting down to speak with Hiria was entertaining, fascinating, funny and disarming. You'll hear her speak with a comfortable frankness about challenges that she has faced personally and those that still exist for her community. She talks about what is and isn't tapu to paint for her, why cooking pots are an important subject in her practice… and about the pivotal role a naked man jumping out of a birthday cake has played in her career.I started by asking about her childhood and first encounters with art.Tim Melville Hiria Anderson-Mita PagePage Galleries Hiria Anderson-Mita PageHiria Anderson-Mita InstagramThe Good Oil Instagram
In this episode of Psych Matters, Dr Rees Tapsell, a Māori fellow of the RANZCP interviews Dr Rātahi Bell, a senior registrar in forensic specialty training about the specific challenges and opportunities that come with training as a Maori psychiatric registrar in New Zealand. They discuss the importance of dual competence (being able to walk equally in both the Māori and Psychiatric worlds) in working in New Zealand and the value that bringing an integrated approach can have in the assessment and management of a Māori patient within their whānau (family). They discuss important Māori concepts and processes and their value to the range of therapeutic tasks that a psychiatrist might face in dealing not only with Māori patients and whanau but with patients of all backgrounds. Equally they discuss the cultural demands and expectations that a Māori trainee can face and the additional supports that can make training more tolerable and successful.Dr Rees Tapsell is of Māori, heralding from the Arawa canoe and of Ngāti Whakaue descent. He is the Executive Director of the Midland Regional Forensic Service and the Director of Clinical Services for the Waikato Mental Health and Addictions services at the Waikato District Health Board. He is a clinical lecturer with the department of psychological medicine at the Auckland School of Medicine. Dr Tapsell has served as a General Council member with the Australia and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, as a board member on two HHSs/DHBs, on several small private companies and he served as a psychiatrist Deputy Member on the Mental Health Review Tribunal for 12 years. He has been involved in the development of a number of Māori specific approaches to the provision of mental health care to Māori in both general and forensic services and in both government and NGO settings. Dr Tapsell's particular professional and research interests lie in the governance and leadership of health organisations, the epidemiology of mental disorders, Māori mental health service development, outcome measures in Māori mental health ‘mentally abnormal' offenders and undergraduate and postgraduate education and training.Dr Rātahi Bell is a Māori psychiatry trainee based in Waikato, New Zealand, and is of the Ngāti Maniapoto tribe descending from the Tainui waka (or canoe). He is a stage 3 trainee completing an advanced certificate in forensic psychiatry. Dr Bell is a current trainee representative on Te Kaunihera mo ngā kaupapa Hauora Hinengaro Māori, a constituent committee of the RANZCP informing policy and training through an equity lens.Feedback:If you have a topic suggestion or would like to participate in a future episode of Psych Matters, we'd love to hear from you.Please contact us by email at: psychmatters.feedback@ranzcp.orgDisclaimer:This podcast is provided to you for information purposes only and to provide a broad public understanding of various mental health topics. The podcast may represent the views of the author and not necessarily the views of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists ('RANZCP'). The podcast is not to be relied upon as medical advice, or as a substitute for medical advice, does not establish a doctor-patient relationship and should not be a substitute for individual clinical judgement. By accessing The RANZCP's podcasts you also agree to the full terms and conditions of the RANZCP's Website. Expert mental health information and finding a psychiatrist in Australia or New Zealand is available on the RANZCP's Your Health In Mind Website.
Nate Maniapoto is an awesome DJ/radio-host, sound-engineer and voice-over artist based in Palmerston North, New Zealand. Check out his work and portfolio on all major platforms. Follow Nate Maniapoto: https://www.instagram.com/nate.maniapoto/ https://soundcloud.com/nativequest Don't forget to subscribe and support us for future episodes of the Beat Whānau Podcast. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beatwhanau/message
To honour my new land, I am happy to chat to Joycee and Michelle. We let the conversation flow as always, some interesting topics were brought up. But I was intrigued to know more about Mirimiri healing, which is a Maori way of energy healing. Really great chat. Please let me know your thoughts and any questions. If you would like to be a guest on the podcast please reach out, Tena Koutou Katoa, Ko Jocelyn Te Kanawa ahau Ko Ngāti Maniapoto rātou, Ko Ngāti Pikiao, Ko Ngāti Hikairo, Ko Te Whakatōhea ngā Iwi Kei Aotearoa ahau, he wahi ātaahua. Greetings to everyone, My name is Jocelyn Te Kanawa, I am a descendant of Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Pikiao, Ngāti Hikairo and Te Whakatōhea in the beautiful country of New Zealand. Since 2015 I re-connected embarking my wairuatanga (spirituality) learning Mirimiri/Romiromi (Māori Healing) along side learning about Māori Rongoā (Māori medicine) which re-awoken what work I saw my Kuia - Grandmother do when I was a child also learning other modalities that I added to my Kete Matauranga (bag of knowledge). I enjoy learning and teaching as it helps me to grow and I believe in helping others to help heal themselves. About my name Creative Inspiring Journeys: Creating an awareness journey towards healing you as I heal me, creating & providing products to help others, to inspire others to be inspired and lastly we all journey to what destination we choose its what we choose to do with that. Just be, learn, teach, live & love, Arohanui Jocelyn Te Kanawa Our Story - https://www.thecrystalpoint.nz/ The Crystal Point was born in 2006 out of a husband and wife's passion for Spirituality. We are Trevor and Michelle Nelley, and from the moment we met our individual Spiritual journeys came together. We shared our Spiritual Gifts with each other, and over time began to share them with others. Previously known as Spiritual Gardens, and renamed to The Crystal Point in 2016, we are a family business that started in our home, as a side hustle to our day jobs. Our home and garage quickly became full of crystals, Himalayan salt lamps, tarot, oracle and divination cards, incense and much more. It became a familiar place for many who came to find treasures to aide them on their own spiritual journey, and also enjoyed the feeling of safety and comfort that came with being in our home. Over time we saw a need for people to access all of the wonderful Spiritual Gifts available, so we brought healers together and ran Natural & Holistic Fairs and Psychic Suppers around the North Island. In 2020 the business had grown and we felt the time was right to take the next step and open up a shop in Hamilton. Our customers moved with us, and now our shop is not only a wonderful supplier of spiritual products and services, but a place for like-minded people to meet, connect, gather knowledge and grow on their Spiritual journey. We've seen the effects first hand of being a part of this community - coming together and being surrounded by love and understanding supports you to explore your own Spiritual gifts and to grow and learn on your Spiritual journey. It is a privilege to be a part of this community, and one we are very passionate about. We exist to bring together information, our own experiences, healing aides and holistic products, all in an effort to help you on your spiritual journey. We pride ourselves on our range of alternative products and therapies – bringing you crystals, quality incense, artwork, Clairvoyant/Psychic/Mediumship readings, a monthly newsletter and more. Take a look inside our store! Follow me @iampippaleslie Find out more about me and my services at www.iampippaleslie.com Please leave me a 5* review and share with your friends. Thank you Namaste Pippa QHHT practitioner & Reiki Master Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ngāti Maniapoto is describing an apology and treaty settlement as a fresh start for relations with the Crown. The prime minister travelled to Te Rohe Pōtae - the King Country - yesterday to apologise for more than 150 years of treaty breaches. Jamie Tahana was at Te Kuiti Pā.
In 2010, the National Government signed the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, joining more than 140 other countries; in 2019 the Labour Government set up a working group tasked with creating a plan to realise that commitment. The result is He Puapua, a discussion document whose title refers to the break between waves and evokes the concept of a disruption to political and legislative norms. Within days, it would become a political football, with some demanding a “national conversation”. So let's talk. Is this an opportunity or a threat for the country? Working group members, writers and lawyers Claire Charters (Ngāti Whakaue, Tūwharetoa, Ngāpuhi, Tainui) and Jacinta Ruru (Raukawa, Ngāti Ranginui, Ngāti Maniapoto) discuss sovereignty, mātauranga Māori and igniting the imagination with Moana Maniapoto (Ngāti Tūwharetoa, Te Arawa). Ara Kē, Ao Kē Series curated by Moana Maniapoto. Supported by Royal Society Te Apārangi. I te tau 2010, ka waitohu te Kāwanatanga Nāhinara i Te Whakapuakitanga a te Rūnanga Whakakotahi i ngā Iwi o te Ao mō ngā Mōtika o ngā Iwi Taketake, pēnei i ētahi whenua 140 neke atu; i te tau 2019 ka whakarite te Kāwanatanga Reipa i tētahi ohu mahi, ko tāna he waihanga i tētahi mahere e tutuki ai taua oati. Ko te hua, ko He Puapua, he tuhinga matapaki, ko tōna taitara e hāngai ana ki te whatinga o te ngaru, me te aha, nāna i pupū ai he whakaaro mō te whakarerekē i ngā āhuatanga ā-tōrangapū, ā-ture anō o te wā. Mea rawa ake, ka whakamahia hei tao tōrangapū, ko ētahi hoki e auē ana mō tētahi "whakawhitinga kōrero ā-motu." Ā kāti, kia kōrero tātou. He ara whai hua rānei, he kapatau rānei tēnei mō te motu? Ko ngā mema o te ohu mahi, ko ngā ringatuhi, ko ngā rōia anō, ko Claire Charters (Ngāti Whakaue, Tūwharetoa, Ngāpuhi, Tainui) rāua ko Jacinta Ruru (Raukawa, Ngāti Ranginui, Ngāti Maniapoto) ka kōrero mō te tino rangatiratanga, mō te mātauranga Māori, mō te hika anō i te kāpura pohewa, me Moana Maniapoto (Ngāti Tūwharetoa, Te Arawa). He mea tautoko nā Te Apārangi. Ara Kē, Ao Kē - Nā Moana Maniapoto tēnei kohinga i rauhī. AUCKLAND WRITERS FESTIVAL, WAITUHI O TĀMAKI SATURDAY 27 AUGUST – 12.30-1.30PM WAITĀKERE ROOM, AOTEA CENTRE
Meet the disruptors: Māori journalists helping to lead and shape more nuanced conversation on the issues of the day through a Māori lens. Exploring questions of media power and influence, our line-up includes long-time Radio Waatea host and 'E-Tangata' writer Dale Husband (Ngāti Maru) alongside three fearless wāhine broadcasters and writers: Mihingarangi Forbes (Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Paoa), the award-winning host of 'The Hui' (voted Best Current Affairs at NZTV Awards); author and co-presenter for TVNZ's bilingual current affairs show Marae Miriama Kamo (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Mutunga); and Moana Maniapoto (Ngāti Tūwharetoa, Te Arawa), musician and journalist for Te Ao with Moana. Expect lively kōrero... and perhaps a waiata! AUCKLAND WRITERS FESTIVAL, WAITUHI O TĀMAKI FRIDAY 26 AUGUST2022 – 6.30-7.30PM, WAITĀKERE ROOM, AOTEA CENTRE
Sociologist Joanna Kidman (Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Raukawa) and historian Vincent O'Malley make a formidable team, as partners in life and scholarship. They both contributed to the recently published 'Fragments from a Contested Past: Remembrance, Denial and New Zealand History', and co-lead the Marsden Fund project – 'He Taonga te Wareware?: Remembering and Forgetting Difficult Histories in Aotearoa New Zealand' – a three-year study into how the 19th-century NZ Wars have shaped memory, identity and history. O'Malley is a founding partner of History Works and the author of the 2022 Ockham NZ Book Awards General Non-Fiction winner 'Voices from the New Zealand Wars | He Reo nō ngā Pakanga o Aotearoa'. Kidman is a Professor of Sociology with a particular interest in youth movements and higher education. They speak with Chris Wikaira about their writing, passions and collaborations. Supported by Heartland Bank.
Les Misérables opened on the West End in 1985 and is still running, making it London's longest-running musical. It's by Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil, who are in Australia to present a concert of their best-loved songs performed by the crème de la crème of musical theatre.Also, Maori man Rodney Bell (Ngāti Maniapoto) traces his journey from butcher and rugby player to celebrated dancer and wheelchair user in Meremere and Broadway performer Nikki Snelson guides young performers to new heights in the University of Adelaide's production of Legally Blonde the Musical.
Les Misérables opened on the West End in 1985 and is still running, making it London's longest-running musical. It's by Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil, who are in Australia to present a concert of their best-loved songs performed by the crème de la crème of musical theatre. Also, Maori man Rodney Bell (Ngāti Maniapoto) traces his journey from butcher and rugby player to celebrated dancer and wheelchair user in Meremere and Broadway performer Nikki Snelson guides young performers to new heights in the University of Adelaide's production of Legally Blonde the Musical.
This week our Maori news team are there as Maniapoto reaches settlement with the crown, Maori fisheries take stock 30 years after one of the first major settlements, recognising mana whenua at Kura Tawhiti and plenty more.
Cheers roared through both Parliament and Pipitea Marae in Wellington today, as the Crown and Ngāti Maniapoto reached settlement. The King Country iwi is one of the largest remaining treaty settlements. A $177 million dollar settlement and a range of cultural redress was passed by parliament today. Ashleigh McCaull reports.
Disheartened by one-dimensional coverage of gangs in Pākehā media, Moana Maniapoto and Hikurangi Jackson set about delving into the issue themselves. The Whakaata Māori mother-son duo's empathetic coverage captured the complexity and humanity of Aotearoa's gang landscape.
Curator, producer and performer Beau James joins host Ayeesha Ash to reflect upon their time in the arts industry so far, share some advice they'd give to their younger self and consider the way things have or haven't changed during their time in the arts industry. We also hear about two works they have curated as Head of First Nations Programming at the Sydney Opera House; Rodney Bell Ngāti Maniapoto's ‘Meremere' and photographic exhibition ‘Always Here - 50 Years of Black Theatre' inspired by the National Black Theatre in Redfern and the activism and stories of those who were instrumental to its establishment. Works mentioned and additional resources:https://www.sbs.com.au/nitv/express-yourself/article/2016/06/10/basically-black-legacy-national-black-theatre https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/awaye/culture-comes-first/13468050 https://www.samag.org/sydney-arts-event/heal-country-celebrating-first-nations-leadership-in-the-cultural-sector/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode Neville talks with painter and cultural advisor Andrea Hopkins about her place in the Collaborationz family. How her art practice has evolved and what it's like to be mistress of ceremonies and cultural guide at Collab. Andrea Hopkins Andrea Eve Hopkins (1974 -) Pare Hauraki, Ngāti Pāoa, Ngāti Whanaunga, Ngāti Maru, Ngāti Kinohaku, Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Toa. Welsh, English and Pākehā. Born in Whangārei, Andrea is staunchly aligned with both her Māori and Pākehā lineage, having an arguably extensive knowledge of both histories. She was tutored and mentored by some of the great Māori art educators and artists of our time, including Manos Nathan (1948-2015), Colleen Waata Urlich (1939-2015) and Sandy Adsett (1939-). “I'm not a spokesperson for the entire Māori culture. No-one is. Beware of anyone who claims they are. I've been cornered into speaking for ‘my people' too many times to count.” Andrea started her training at Northland Polytechnic, in Whangārei. After a car accident disrupted her study, Manos Nathan encouraged her attend Toihoukura Art School, in Gisborne. There, under the guidance of master colourist Sandy Adsett, Andrea graduated and entertained the possibility of painting as a full-time practice. Not long after, she was ‘found' at Toimairangi School of Māori Visual Art by Kevyn Male, and went on to be represented by SOCA Gallery in Auckland where her career progressed on both the national and international stage. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/artwonk/message
Summer Wright (Ngāti Maniapoto, Pākehā) is a dietitian, Co-Convenor of OraTaiao, and current PhD candidate at Massey University. Passionate about food sovereignty and social justice issues, Summer's PhD will investigate the social and economic opportunities for Māori businesses in plant-based foods, under the umbrella of the Future Foods Catalyst Programme. Her research will also assess overseas demand for these products and generate insights for alternative land-use decisions for Māori businesses and landowners. Summer's research will help carve a path forward, moving us towards a brighter future – one where food systems aren't so exploitative of people, planet or animals!In this conversation we discuss:• Summer's background and interest in nutrition• Motivation behind Summer's PhD thesis; ‘Unique Value Proposition of Māori Plant-based Foods'• How Summer's research aligns with Tikanga Māori• Land as vital to Māori prosperity and history of land alienating policies• Key concerns regarding consumer choice of plant-based proteins• The need to better integrate education around sustainable food systems into the nutrition and dietetic curriculum• The disconnect between food system intensification and impact on planetary health• Opportunities for plant-based foods to foster social and environmental justice• Summer's role as co-convenor of Ora Taiao; NZ Climate and Health Council• Summer's hope for the futureTo view all the links to the websites and documents, visit the show notes on our website. Don't forget to subscribe to this podcast, leave us a review and share this episode with your friends and family.Please support our work and enable us to deliver more content by buying us a coffee.
Moana Maniapoto (on Moana & The Tribe - 'Maiea' single and video release) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91FM Dunedin
In this episode, we are sharing our recent Wetland Wānanga exploring ngā taonga mahinga kai. Māia Abraham (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāi Tūhoe, Ngā Rauru) and Maatakiwi Wakefield (Kāi Tahu whānui, Te Ati Awa, Ngāti Mutunga, Ngāti Toa, Ngāti Raukawa and Ngāti Maniapoto) of the Māori Library Services share their knowledge on mahinga kai and the relationship between Ngāi Tahu and the significant wetlands within the Ōtautahi area.
New Zealander Arama Kukutai is the Chief Executive of Plenty - a California based indoor, vertical farming technology company. Plenty grows leafy greens and will soon be growing strawberries in tall columns, under LED lights in a fraction of the sapce required for a traditional farm. It has recently constructed a massive - 8800 square metre warehouse in Compton, California, with 2.9 metre-high ceilings, a secure truck court and access to truck routes. Arama Kukutai who is Ngati Tipa, (Tainui), Maniapoto and Te Aupouri on his father's side; and Scottish on his mother's side, grew up in Waikato and attended Victoria University of Wellington. He says California is only one really bad fire season away from having major disruption of its fruit and produce, and indoor growing is part of securing that supply. He will be speaking at E Tipu: The Boma Agri Summit, being held 21-22 June in Christchurch and virtually.
Musician, journalist and icon Moana Maniapoto joins Emile to play some of the favourite artists she has joined on stage around the world over her career. No part of the musical globe will be left untrodden!
In this episode we have a very special guest, Jerome "Puoro" Kavanagh - Grammy award-winning featured soloist and Maori musical instrument specialist Jerome Kavanagh (Poutama) hails from the Maniapoto and Kahungunu tribes (Maori) ,Caomhanach clan (Irish) of Aotearoa, NewZealand. Jerome and his family collection of Taonga Puoro “ Te Haa o Pohokura” also tour globally sharing ORO ATUA Puoro Maori sound healing events and clinics worldwide reviving and sharing Tupuna practises of healing through Sound. Here, Henare and Puoro discussed men's stuff from suicide to the death of their loved ones, to sex and everything about men. You should never miss this one out.CONNECT WITH ME ON MY INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/henarehobrien/ I'm also on Facebook over at https://www.facebook.com/henarehona Or you can check out my website: https://www.henareobrien.com/
Moana Maniapoto (on Moana & The Tribe - 'Āio ana' ft. Mari Boine single release) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Moana Maniapoto (on Moana & The Tribe - 'Āio ana' ft. Mari Boine single release) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
It's an honour to present to you Librarian Raniera Kingi (Poukōkiri Rangahau Māori) in conversation with the author and educator Hēmi Kelly. Hēmi (Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Tahu, Ngāti Whāoa) is a lecturer in te reo Māori at AUT. He is the author of ‘A Māori Word a Day,' ‘A Māori Phrase a Day,' translator of Te ruānuku / The Alchemist for the Kōtahi Rau Pukapuka project; and runs Everyday Māori on Facebook and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everydaymaori/.
Tu is the inspired pairing of two powerful New Zealand artists who share a passion for fusing Māori electronic dub music with a politically conscious edge. Prior to Going West 2018, Tu had only been seen by international audiences. Our festival opening night was the first chance to see this remarkable collaboration between Moana Maniapoto and Paddy Free live in Aotearoa. Moana, singer/songwriter and leader of the band Moana & the Tribe, was inducted into the NZ Music Hall of Fame in 2016 and has been internationally acknowledged for her ground-breaking mix of traditional Māori music elements such as haka and poi with dance beats. Electronic dub producer Paddy Free (Pitch Black and Salmonella Dub) is a pioneer of the New Zealand electronic scene, his reputation built on experimenting with taonga puoro (traditional Māori music instruments), beats and global bass. Tu is a unique new collaboration that can only have come from the South Pacific. It slips and slides across genres, rhythmically and sonically compelling, with a message that resonates with the times.
Māori academics say they're having to pull double-shifts - both as researchers, and as unpaid cultural guides for their non-Māori colleagues. That's from a new study which found that many Māori scientists are left with little time for their own work because they're expected to explain te ao Māori to their workmates, while they're also charged with explaining to whānau, iwi and hapū what the science sector is trying to achieve. AUT University professor of management Jarrod Haar is a co-author of the study. He whakapapas to Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Mahuta.
Veranoa Hetet (Ngāti Tūwharetoa, Ngāti Maniapoto, Te Ātiawa) is a master weaver and one of our country’s most celebrated contemporary artists. Although, the humble wahine from Waiwhetū cringes when you describe her as that. Veranoa is an uri of renowned weavers and teachers, her grandmother, the late Dame Rangimarie Hetet and her mother, the late Erenora Puketapu-Hetet. As well as her aunty, the late Diggeress Te Kanawa. She says being surrounded by art, and having parents as masters of their art, meant her journey was pretty straight forward. Today, her work is national museum collections, it adorns the walls of galleries, she has kākahu that are awarded for excellence, like the New Zealander of the Year award, and most importantly, her work is worn and carried by her tamariki and mokopuna. Veranoa also helps whānau around the world to reclaim Māori art traditions through the Hetet School of Maori Art, an online kura where she teaches raranga, tāniko and kākahu, including korowai. In this episode we talk about the importance of keeping our art practices alive, the beauty and vitality of the harakeke plant and we learn the correct kupu for our different woven cloaks.
David Letele (Samoa, Ngāti Maniapoto), a former professional boxer turned motivational speaker and founder of Buttabean Motivation which is changing lives and improving the health outcomes of people across Tāmaki Makaurau through free Community Boot Camps and a range of other community programmes. This is his story. Indigenous 100 - Dave Letele.
I tēnei ata we had the legendary Moana Maniapoto in studio to talk about her new track 'Tōku Reo' from the forthcoming album 'Opo'. Working with Pitch Black's Paddy Free, Professor Scotty Morrison and vocalist Inka Mbing from the Atayal tribe in Taiwan, Moana created the track as part of an ongoing music project exploring karakia and indigenous reo around the world. Whakarongo mai nei!
I tēnei ata we had the legendary Moana Maniapoto in studio to talk about her new track 'Tōku Reo' from the forthcoming album 'Opo'. Working with Pitch Black's Paddy Free, Professor Scotty Morrison and vocalist Inka Mbing from the Atayal tribe in Taiwan, Moana created the track as part of an ongoing music project exploring karakia and indigenous reo around the world. Whakarongo mai nei!
Hēmi Kelly (Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Tahu–Ngāti Whāoa) started learning te reo Māori as a young teenager and naturally progressed into teaching roles after study. Hēmi is a full-time lecturer in te reo Māori at the Auckland University of Technology. His academic research and writing focus on the revitalisation of the Māori language and translation studies. Hēmi is a licensed translator and graduate of Te Panekiretanga o Te Reo (The Institute of Excellence in the Māori Language). He is also involved in Māori language planning and revitalisation initiatives in a number of organisations, including his own tribal communities. In 2017, Hēmi translated Witi Ihimaera's novella Sleeps Standing, and he published his first book A Māori Word a Day in 2018. In 2019, Hēmi published his first creative writing piece in English in Pūrākau, a collection of Māori myths retold by Māori writers and his second book A Māori Phrase a Day in 2020.
TŪ is the inspired pairing of two powerful New Zealand artists who share a passion for fusing Māori electronic dub music with a politically conscious edge. Prior to Going West 2018, TŪ had only been seen by international audiences. Our festival opening night was the first chance to see this remarkable collaboration between Moana Maniapoto and Paddy Free live in Aotearoa. Moana, singer/songwriter and leader of the band Moana & the Tribe, was inducted into the NZ Music Hall of Fame in 2016 and has been internationally acknowledged for her ground-breaking mix of traditional Māori music elements such as haka and poi with dance beats. Electronic dub producer Paddy Free (Pitch Black and Salmonella Dub) is a pioneer of the New Zealand electronic scene, his reputation built on experimenting with taonga puoro (traditional Māori music instruments), beats and global bass. TŪ is a unique new collaboration that can only have come from the South Pacific. It slips and slides across genres, rhythmically and sonically compelling, with a message that resonates with the times.
This Ngāti Maniapoto wāhine toa shares her whakaaro about life, identity and her inspiring journey in Acting. FB - TAAKE TU
“I have no emotions towards Cook whatsoever. I see him as a symbol of a change, and the impact of that change we are still dealing with.” The musician and current affairs presenter Moana Maniapoto delivers a bold address not only to Cook, but to Australia as a nation. In this episode, she talks about passing identity through language, the shield of white privilege in New Zealand and Australia, and challenges the myths that our nations choose to uphold.
Talented Artist & Musician - Thomas Rose. Hailing from Tonga, Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Kuia; we got to have a chat and a few laughs about musicianship, identity, DJ'ing for Londons first Pacific Nightclub and life in London so far.
Hon Nanaia Mahuta is a tribal member of Waikato-Tainui, Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Hine and her parliamentary experience has enabled her to contribute to the collective aspirations of Māori and all New Zealanders - Nanaia Mahuta Indigenous 100
Kurt Schmidt couldn't read at age 10, and he's now a Mechanical Engineer. Born and raised on Great Barrier Island, Kurt shares with us his thoughts on being failed by the education system, the "lawlessness" of Great Barrier Island, and what he thinks is holding his tribe (Ngāti Maniapoto) back.
This week talk about Culturalising Tech OR Decolonising the Algorithm. Our people were resourceful and fearless in seeking out and settling in new lands, the digital future is no different, this is who we are and we need to be leading the way. AI - Artificial Intelligence - is everywhere. Did you know that in Aotearoa less than 2% of the people working in Tech are Maori & Pasifika? Thinking about what that means for a future filled with AI, AI created by and for non-indigenous peoples, without tikanga or values, is Dan Te Whenua Walker. Dan, of Ngāti Ruanui, Ngā Ruahinerangi, Ngāti Kahungunu ki Wairoa, Maniapoto, Tūhourangi is the Cloud Infrastructure and Applications Solutions Specialist at Microsoft New Zealand.
Rodney Bell (Ngāti Maniapoto on 'MEREMERE') Interview by Rafael Clarke on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Rodney Bell (Ngāti Maniapoto on 'MEREMERE') Interview by Rafael Clarke on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Musician Moana Maniapoto will be well-known to nearly all of our listeners.She was a trailblazer with her music when she first burst onto the music scene in the late 80s, which was recognised when she won this year’s Classic Record prize by Independent Music New Zealand.Moana has been busy in other areas too, as a writer and documentary maker and now making a new Maori current affairs programme for Maori TV: Te Ao with Moana.Moana Maniapoto joins Saturday Morning with Jack Tame to discuss her career and what we can expect from her new programme.LISTEN TO THE AUDIO ABOVE
The open night performance of Tu with artists Moana Maniapoto and Paddy Free sees a mix up of mōteatea/sung poetry with dub, chanting and drum and bass. In this extract Moana introduced and shares three of the pieces performed in what was a feast of music, poetry and prose that was Opening Night at the Going West Writers Festival 2018. Photo credit: Moana Maniapoto and Paddy Free, 14 Sept 2018, Going West Writers Festival, Photographer Liz March.
Rewi Manga Maniapoto (1807-1894) Letter to Sir George Grey, written at Kihikihi 19 o Pēpuere 1894 19 February 1894 Ki a Hori Kerei, E hoa, tēnā koe i runga i tō tāua aroha ki a tāua. Kua tae nei tāua ki ngā rā (o) ō tāua tūpuna, heoi, ka mutu te mihi. Ka tū te kupu, he kupu whakaatu ki a koe i runga i te āhua kaumātua o tōu tinana, o tōku tinana i ngā rā i ō tō tāua kotahitanga, ā, tae mai ana ki (i)nāianei, ki roto i ēnei rā. Taku kupu nui tēnei ki a koe, me noho tāua ki roto i te kōhatu kotahi. Heoi anō, Nā tō hoa aroha, Abstract Refers to their mutual affection now they are old, and from their time of being of one mind. Suggests that for this reason their names be recorded on the same memorial stone. Includes a note in English to Grey from Manga (Rewi Maniapoto), asking if Kihi has arrived with a sketch of the tombstone. Page with the sketch follows. Ngā reta Māori Grey New Zealand Māori letters Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections GNZMA 218 https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/manuscripts/id/6428/rec/1 Read by: J. Ramanui Music Intro: Hirini Melbourne and Richard Nunns Sound Engineering: Justin Rodenas & Sue Berman Recorded at Te Oro Studios Glen Innes
Legendary musician, documentary maker and feature writer Moana Maniapoto (Ngāti Tūwharetoa/Tu hourangi-Ngāti Wahiao) joins Tama Waipara in the Heartland Festival Room for an hour of chat and music. With her band Moana & the Tribe she has performed around the world, sharing her “blend of traditional and contemporary styles without compromising either” (The New Zealand Herald) with lyrics rooted in the NZ landscape, culture and experience. Maniapoto is an Arts Foundation Laureate, winner of the Grand Jury Prize for International Songwriting, was inducted into the NZ Music Hall of Fame in 2016, and her album Rima was a finalist for all three major music awards in 2015. She is currently in production for her sixth studio album ONO.
Moana Maniapoto shares her current summer jam with Kirsten Johnstone
Bringing together a range of practicing artists, academics and researchers, this roundtable discussion explores issues of precarious citizenship, temporary labour and refugee resettlement in Aotearoa. The discussion brings elements of the exhibition 'I Swear' by Bruce Barber at Te Tuhi (13 May - 29 October 2017) into conversation with recent local and global political events and explore their impact upon the colonial legacy of Aotearoa and the Pacific. PANELLISTS Bruce Barber Professor Bruce Barber PhD is an interdisciplinary artist, cultural historian and curator, based in Halifax, Nova Scotia where he teaches courses in Media Arts, Art History and Contemporary Studies at NSCAD University. His art practice has been exhibited internationally and is documented in the publications Reading Rooms and Bruce Barber Work 1970-2008 He is the editor of Essays on Performance and Cultural Politicization and of Conceptual Art: the NSCAD Connection 1967-1973. He is co-editor, with Serge Guilbaut and John O'Brian of Voices of Fire: Art Rage, Power, and the State. Editor of Conde + Beveridge: Class Works (2008); author of Performance [Performance] and Performers: Essays and Conversations (2 volumes) edited by Marc Léger (2008), Trans/Actions: Art, Film and Death (2008) and Littoral Art and Communicative Action (2013). www.brucebarber.ca Pauline Gardiner Barber (chair) Professor of Social Anthropology, Dalhousie University, Canada. Migration specialist working on Philippine global migration. Her most recent project explores the transnational effects of recent major changes to Canada’s “just-in-time” immigration system. Arama Rata (Ngāti Maniapoto, Taranaki, and Ngāruahine) After completing a PhD in Psychology, she lectured in Māori Studies at Victoria University of Wellington. Now at the National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, she has research projects into a variety of Māori issues, including attitudes towards immigration and political participation. Dr Rata is also the Māori spokesperson for MARRC (Migrants and Refugee Rights Campaign). Andrea Merino-Ortiz MA anthropology student interested in the effects of New Zealand’s heavy reliance on volunteers in the resettlement of Columbian refugees. She explores how volunteers affect resettlement, and how refugees engage with volunteer-based assistance in the process of resettlement. Mua Strickson-Pua Reverend Mua Strickson-Pua is a Samoan-Chinese poet born in Aotearoa. He is a Presbyterian minister and community work chaplain practitioner of P.A.T.H. Pasifika Arts for Therapy and Healing at Tagata Pasifika Resources Development Trust serving Pacific nations communities in Auckland for the last ten years. He is also the co-founder of Street Poets Black.
Nau mai, Tauti mai e kare mā ki Taringa. I tēnei hōtaka ka puta ngētehi e pā ana ki Te Rohe Pōtae, Ngāti Maniapoto. Ko tā tātou kaikōrero mo te wiki nei, ko tētehi o ngā kanohi kitea, o ngā rangatira o Ngāti Maniapoto, arā ko Doug Ruki. Areare mai o Taringa e hoa mā!
There is an eclectic mix of songs on Moana and the Tribe's latest album, Rima. First there is the electronic influence of musician Paddy Free and a commissioned duet with well-established singer and songwriter Don McGlashan. But there is still the messages of importance that is a key signature of Moana's work. The song 'Whole Worlds Watching' is a call for people to speak up about the atrocities in the Middle East and the acapella song 'Hands-Up' encourages people to vote. Te reo māori is woven into the album helped along with the contribution of te reo māori advocate and broadcaster, Scotty Morrison. Moana talks about Rima with Justine Murray.
There is an eclectic mix of songs on Moana and the Tribe's latest album, Rima. First there is the electronic influence of musician Paddy Free and a commissioned duet with well-established singer and songwriter Don McGlashan. But there is still the messages of importance that is a key signature of Moana's work. The song 'Whole Worlds Watching' is a call for people to speak up about the atrocities in the Middle East and the acapella song 'Hands-Up' encourages people to vote. Te reo māori is woven into the album helped along with the contribution of te reo māori advocate and broadcaster, Scotty Morrison. Moana talks about Rima with Justine Murray.
Shane Te Ruki no Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Porou is the resident Kaumatua of the National Museum, Te Papa Tongarewa, on Waitangi Day he presented a lecture Mokopapa 2014, Think before You Ink, part one of that lecture features.
Shane Te Ruki no Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Porou is the resident Kaumatua of the National Museum, Te Papa Tongarewa, on Waitangi Day he presented a lecture Mokopapa 2014, Think before You Ink, part one of that lecture features.
Nau te rourou, Naku te rourou. Ka ora ai te iwi katoa. Explained by Erueti Tutaki nō Ngāti Maniapoto.
Nau te rourou, Naku te rourou. Ka ora ai te iwi katoa. Explained by Erueti Tutaki nō Ngāti Maniapoto.
Kororia ki te atua kei runga, Maungārongo ki te whenua, Whakaaro pai ki nga tangata katoa. Glory to God on high, peace on earth and Goodwill to all mankind. Explained by Rangi Kipa nō Te Ati Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto.
Kororia ki te atua kei runga, Maungārongo ki te whenua, Whakaaro pai ki nga tangata katoa. Glory to God on high, peace on earth and Goodwill to all mankind. Explained by Rangi Kipa nō Te Ati Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto.