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Learn te reo Māori at Te Wānanga O Aotearoa

Monday 29 May 2017, 4:55PM

By Beckie Wright

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Te Wānanga O Aotearoa has many success stories, and this is one proving that anyone can learn te reo Māori. When Rebecca Tamati first enrolled in Te Ara Reo Māori Level 2 with Te Wānanga O Aotearoa in Ōtautahi, her understanding of the language was pretty basic. “I had no knowledge whatsoever, possibly a couple of words, that was it. I couldn’t even properly pronounce words like tahi, rua, toru, whā, tēna koe, tēna koutou,” she says.

That was in 2003, when Te Wānanga o Aotearoa first ventured into Te Waipounamu. Fast forward 14 years and Rebecca – known to everyone as Bex - is now the kaiako for Te Ara Reo Māori Level 2 in Ōtautahi, the same programme that got her started all those years ago. “It’s awesome. Last year, I was employed as a kaiawhina on Level 2 and Level 4 and this year I’m a kaiako for Level 2.”

Rebecca – who has Pākeha whakapapa – has continued her language journey with Te Wānanga o Aotearoa and completed the Level 6 Aupikitanga programme in 2013. She is currently completing a Bachelor of Māori Language and Indigenous Studies at ARA in Ōtautahi.

What prompted her to begin studying te reo Māori was working in her community of Aranui. “I saw the kids that had the reo and they carried their mana, they had pride. I thought with some of the others there was something missing and I identified it as the language. When I heard the wānanga was coming down, something inside me sprang to life and I thought ‘I’ve got to learn te reo’.”

A key breakthrough, she says, was connecting with a study group in the community, which enabled her to use the language outside the classroom. “I could integrate it into my life, it was a different avenue,” she says.

 “I was overwhelmed and thought about giving up. I felt like I was drowning but some amazing kuia were very supportive and reminded me how far I’d come. Once I had broken through that barrier I thought I’d just put all my effort into it and see how it goes and step out of the box I put myself in. I learned and grew so much through that year.”

And while she’s now teaching others to speak te reo Māori – a role she never dreamed she would have - her own language journey isn’t done yet.

“I’ll carry on with my reo. I’ve always kept Pinakitanga up my sleeve for when I have time.”

 

Te Wānanga o Aotearoa is a world leader in indigenous education and New Zealand’s second largest tertiary provider, and their purpose is to provide unique, high-quality education opportunities – delivered through a Māori world view – which will lead to positive transformational changes for all their tauira (students), so for more information please go to http://www.twoa.ac.nz .