A ‘forever language’ – te Wiki o te Reo Maori marks 52 years of extraordinary progress
Despite today’s tensions over Treaty principles and Maori political representation, the language revitalisation movement has delivered the culturally confident generation its trailblazers dreamed of.
Jeanette King, Professor, Aotahi School of Maori and Indigenous Studies, University of Canterbury
16 September 2024
Ko tenei te Wiki o te Reo Maori – it’s Maori Language Week.
It’s been 52 years since the landmark moment on September 14 1972, when Hana Te Hemara and her fellow activists from Nga Tamatoa, Te Reo Maori Society and student group Te Huinga Tauira marched to parliament and carefully placed a suitcase on its steep, grey steps.
Inside the suitcase was a petition with 30,000 signatures, which became known as te Petihana Reo Maori – the Maori Language Petition.
Although a National government was still in power, a general election was due and the petition was delivered to MP Matiu Rata, soon to become Minister of Maori Affairs in the Labour government of Norman Kirk.
It was one of the most important catalysts for the subsequent Maori language revitalisation movement, and led to the introduction of optional te reo classes in schools, and teacher training courses.
Over the years since, there have been many more milestones as te reo Maori regained its place in the nation’s life and culture, including it becoming an official language in 1987, the direct result of the WAI11 Waitangi Tribunal claim.
Already, in 1982, the kohanga reo (preschool language “nest”) system had begun, after a national hui of kaumatua was presented with research showing very few Maori children were being raised as speakers of the language.
With the subsequent advent of kura kaupapa Maori (language immersion schools) and wananga (tertiary institutions), the language’s slow decline since colonisation was gradually reversed. A new phrase eventually entered the national consciousness: the kohanga reo generation.
A better future
While there have been several generations of kohanga reo graduates, it’s the current group of savvy, articulate reo speakers aged under 35 that is making waves.
They include politicians such as Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke and now the new Kuini Maori Nga wai hono i te po. Along with many others, they embody the energy, vision and passion of the kohanga reo generation, grounded in their whakapapa and identity as reo Maori speakers.
Looking back from this vantage point to 1972, it’s clear Aotearoa New Zealand has come a long way. The people behind that landmark petition were largely urban-raised and disconnected from their Maori roots. But they wanted a better future for Maori children, and access to te reo Maori was one of their key priorities.
At the heart of the petition was a very modest request:
We the undersigned, do humbly pray that courses in Maori language and aspects of Maori culture be offered in all those schools with large Maori rolls and that these same courses be offered as a gift to the Pakeha from the Maori in all other New Zealand schools as a positive effort to promote a more meaningful concept of integration.
Essentially, they were asking for te reo Maori to be taught in some schools – hardly an earth-shattering request at face value, but one with profound consequences.
And the life and influence of the petition didn’t stop there. September 14 quickly became Maori Language Day, which then became Maori Language Week, which we’ve been celebrating ever since.
Ake, Ake, Ake
Hana Te Hemara was only 22 when she laid that petition on the steps of parliament. But she knew it was a historic moment, one that would lead to a future almost impossible to envisage back then – one where a strong generation of young Maori, fluent in te reo, would take their place as leaders in their country.
That journey is far from over, of course. In 2018, the then Labour government set a national target of one million te reo Maori speakers (at any level of proficiency) by 2040.
Tomorrow, data visualisations based on the 2018 Census will be released by researchers looking at how the language is tracking, and what resources and strategies might be needed now to ensure its long-term revitalisation and survival.
It’s particularly appropriate, then, that the theme for this year’s te Wiki o te Reo Maori is “Ake Ake Ake – A Forever Language”. The phrase also has a political context, being the words said to have been spoken by Rewi Maniapoto at the seige of Orakau in 1864: Ka whawhai tonu matou, Ake, Ake, Ake – we will keep fighting, for as long as it takes.
A forever language still needs to be fought for, especially in the current environment where the government has moved to minimise the official use of te reo.
Let’s remember and celebrate the vision and actions of Hana Te Hemara and others all those years ago, which have ensured te reo Maori has become what it always has been – Aotearoa’s forever language.
Jeanette King does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.