My te reo Māori journey

Delivering my first whaikōrero at Waipapa Marae.


It's currently Māori language week in New Zealand. I am sharing my story of challenging myself to learn the language and a call for others to join me.

If you really want something, making a public commitment to that goal can be one of the most effective ways to get there. It creates accountability and motivation to remove roadblocks. I’ve used this tool many times in the past and my current journey with the native language of New Zealand, te reo Māori, is its most recent deployment.

Two years ago I gave a talk to iwi leaders at an annual dinner hosted by Te Waka Ture, the Māori legal group within law firm Chapman Tripp.

Before me was the actress Jennifer Ward Lealand. The first word that came out of her mouth was in te reo Māori. Then the next. Then a sentence. An idea. A speech. Entirely in te reo for 15 minutes.

It was admirable and inspiring… and I couldn’t understand a word of it.

I was so moved that when it came to my turn to address the audience, before I knew it, I had laid down a wero – a challenge – to myself. I committed to all present that next time we met I too would address them all solely in te reo Māori.

I grew up in Hong Kong, to a Scottish father and a mother of Malay, Chinese and Indian heritage before moving to Auckland as a teenager. I was immersed in a totally new culture and country but rarely paid thought to te reo. In recent years I have increasingly been drawn to te ao Māori, the Māori world. If our generation wishes to help lead and shape New Zealand with an authenticity unique to our country and our history, an understanding of the culture and potency of te ao Māori is non-negotiable. At least, for me it is.

As a society, I think we have also been evolving our ways towards an understanding of the interdependency of our people and planet with a pursuit for profit and genuine sustainability. Indigenous cultures around the world have always understood this, and are wellsprings of supporting wisdom and inspiration on this journey.

Industrialisation destroyed and overran those wellsprings in a relentless pursuit of what became the 20th century models of growth – mechanisation and separation. We are now learning that despite inarguable progress, we have gone too far in overlooking the primacy of what underpins a sustainable world.

Similarly, perhaps many of us in New Zealand have gone too long not making enough effort to understand te ao Māori.

A language is similar to any other part of our natural world in that if it isn’t protected and nourished, it risks dying out.

Learning a new language is fraught with vulnerability and embarrassment. It’s uncomfortable at times but fascinating.

But there is nothing but support and encouragement for anyone wanting to embark on this journey. Taha Māori is, after all, the thing that makes New Zealand unique.

This year, my charitable trust the Aera Foundation hosted Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus in Auckland and partnered with Chapman Trip’s Te Waka Ture team, who brought together many of the same leaders who were there the day I vowed to come back and address them in te reo. In the months between those events, amongst a myriad of other commitments, admittedly it had been challenging. It still is. Doing hard things means turning inertia into momentum and then sustaining it.

One afternoon in April, that delivery date had arrived. We stepped onto the University of Auckland’s Waipapa marae for the welcome pōwhiri for Professor Yunus.

I got up to speak and addressed the audience in te reo Māori.

Curious how it went? Here is a short clip of highlights of Professor Yunus’ visit to Auckland, including excerpts of my debut.

Te Wero Hou (The New Challenge)

Today is the beginning of Māori Language Week for the year. I’ve set a new goal to learn 1000 new words in the coming 52 weeks. If you want to join me on this journey get in touch on my Facebook page here and use the tag #kupuhou1000 or join this ‘class’ on Quizlet where I’ll release a new pack of words every week.

Ka pai e hoa mā!

Nadine Plet

ICT Category Manager -Team Lead Optimisation - Procurement Category Manager - Strategic sourcing - COVID19 ICU Equpmnt & Csumables at NZ HP - Présidente du Conseil Consulaire de Nouvelle-Zélande - (ONM -LH)

6 年

Thanks Lane. Let's set up our challenge...

回复
Lane F.

Procurement / Shared Services / ICT

6 年
回复

Wow!! This is awesome... I've been feeling guilty (of ignorance) for so long, you have just convinced me to put my guilt aside and take up the challenge ??! Thank you Derek.

回复
Sonya Hill MBA

Supporter and developer of strategic analysis and planning.

7 年

Kia kaha!

回复
Shae MacMillan

Administrator Client Services

7 年

kia kaha!

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Derek Handley的更多文章

  • Why Brown is Bad Business for Auckland

    Why Brown is Bad Business for Auckland

    Many Aucklanders are finding this week’s election choice tough but it shouldn’t be. Wayne Brown positions himself as…

    9 条评论
  • On Being Open and Transparent About the NZ CTO Role

    On Being Open and Transparent About the NZ CTO Role

    In the month since Clare Curran’s demotion from Cabinet, there has been continued questioning and speculation over a…

    17 条评论
  • The Role of New Zealand CTO

    The Role of New Zealand CTO

    One month ago I was offered and accepted the position as the first Chief Technology Officer for New Zealand. I felt…

    116 条评论
  • Building Start-ups the Human Way

    Building Start-ups the Human Way

    Some news today. In the middle of last year I established a small ‘studio’ to prototype and build start-up companies…

    7 条评论
  • Opting Out of Email. For Well and Good.

    Opting Out of Email. For Well and Good.

    About five years ago I realised that email and the internet was having a lot of negative side effects in my world and…

    1,012 条评论
  • Talking About Drugs: The Biggest Global Summit in a Generation

    Talking About Drugs: The Biggest Global Summit in a Generation

    The world's 40-plus-year-old system of drug law is failing the very people it is supposed to help, and next week's…

    17 条评论
  • Life is long, if you know how to use it

    Life is long, if you know how to use it

    "Life is long, if you know how to use it." Seneca, 4 BCE - 65 CE Every morning I come across a number of ideas and…

    25 条评论
  • Quit your job and start building something

    Quit your job and start building something

    Almost four years ago, I gave a talk about the intersections in my life between Napoleon, Virgin Galactic and the…

    103 条评论
  • My Good Friend Failure

    My Good Friend Failure

    Failure is sometimes just bad execution. At other times, it's that the idea is too big, or the timing is just wrong.

    50 条评论
  • The Most Inspiring Thing to Happen in Business in Years

    The Most Inspiring Thing to Happen in Business in Years

    A few hours ago Elon Musk announced that Tesla is applying an 'open source' philosophy to their vast patent portfolio…

    73 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了