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WILLIE TE AHO
Willie Te Aho – Moments of gold. Being a negotiator for any iwi on a Treaty of Waitangi settlement isn’t for the faint-hearted. The Crown negotiators don’t bring a lot of aroha to the discussions. Not a lot of understanding either of the 1840 deal and our country’s history. Or, if they do, they’re aware that their political bosses HOW CAN THERE BE JUSTICE IF THE PROCESS ISN'T JUST? How can there be justice if the process isn’t just? Moana Maniapoto with Chris Finlayson, Margaret Mutu, and Chris McKenzie, on Te Ao with Moana. Through the years, the mainstream media has had trouble applying itself to the task of calling the Crown to account for downplaying the Treaty. PRUE KAPUA: WE HAVE TO STEP UP AS MĀORI Prue Kapua: We have to step up as Māori. Prue Kapua has been “stepping up” for a good many years now — opting for law as a career, taking on some difficult opponents in the Environment Court, and, late last year, becoming the president of the Māori Women’s Welfare League. She has had frustrations along the way, but there havebeen
RICKY HOUGHTON: I’D HEARD ALL ABOUT THE FAR NORTH BEING Ricky Houghton didn’t have a charmed life as a boy. But he learned a lot from the years when he was running foul of the community and the cops, during his time in various state institutions. For some years now, after a 17-year apprenticeship with the Waipareira Trust, he’s been encouraging his people in the Far North to take a good look at E-TANGATA - A MĀORI AND PASIFIKA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The Māori voice comes in English as well as te reo. by E-Tangata. “English is the language that reaches all the politicians and the voters, including the journalists and teachers and lawyers and doctors and nurses and academics and business leaders ELLA HENRY: CREATING A NEW AOTEAROA Ella Henry: Creating a new Aotearoa. Dr Ella Henry, photographed in her office at AUT’s Business School. (Photo: Cornell Tukiri ©) In this kōrero with Dale Husband, Dr Ella Henry acknowledges that there was a big slice of her life when she wasn’t all that productive. She bummed around, she says. THE TERROR OF THE DAWN RAIDS The Dawn Raids of 1974 and 1976 were “the most blatantly racist attack on Pacific peoples by the New Zealand government in New Zealand’s history”, writes Dr Melani Anae in her new book, The Platform: The Radical Legacy of the Polynesian Panthers.. In this edited extract, she looks at the political and social climate that gave rise to the raids — and the circumstances that led to both JOE HARAWIRA: HEALING THE WORLD THROUGH STORY Joe Harawira: Healing the world through story. Joe Harawira: “I came to the realisation that my destiny was to help heal the world through story.”. Joe Harawira from Whakatāne (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto, Tūhourangi) has transfixed many a class of Kiwi schoolkids. Overseas audiences, too. ALISON JONES, AUTHOR AT E-TANGATA About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: BOBBIE HUNTER: MATHS BELONGS IN EVERY CULTURE Bobbie Hunter: Maths belongs in every culture. Professor Bobbie Hunter: “I’d like education to be immune from political change. We might get somewhere then, in terms of equity.”. It’s been dubbed “Bobbie maths”, a culturally attuned, internationally recognised approach to teaching maths that’s been making a difference in lowWILLIE TE AHO
Willie Te Aho – Moments of gold. Being a negotiator for any iwi on a Treaty of Waitangi settlement isn’t for the faint-hearted. The Crown negotiators don’t bring a lot of aroha to the discussions. Not a lot of understanding either of the 1840 deal and our country’s history. Or, if they do, they’re aware that their political bosses HOW CAN THERE BE JUSTICE IF THE PROCESS ISN'T JUST? How can there be justice if the process isn’t just? Moana Maniapoto with Chris Finlayson, Margaret Mutu, and Chris McKenzie, on Te Ao with Moana. Through the years, the mainstream media has had trouble applying itself to the task of calling the Crown to account for downplaying the Treaty. PRUE KAPUA: WE HAVE TO STEP UP AS MĀORI Prue Kapua: We have to step up as Māori. Prue Kapua has been “stepping up” for a good many years now — opting for law as a career, taking on some difficult opponents in the Environment Court, and, late last year, becoming the president of the Māori Women’s Welfare League. She has had frustrations along the way, but there havebeen
RICKY HOUGHTON: I’D HEARD ALL ABOUT THE FAR NORTH BEING Ricky Houghton didn’t have a charmed life as a boy. But he learned a lot from the years when he was running foul of the community and the cops, during his time in various state institutions. For some years now, after a 17-year apprenticeship with the Waipareira Trust, he’s been encouraging his people in the Far North to take a good look at THE TERROR OF THE DAWN RAIDS The Dawn Raids of 1974 and 1976 were “the most blatantly racist attack on Pacific peoples by the New Zealand government in New Zealand’s history”, writes Dr Melani Anae in her new book, The Platform: The Radical Legacy of the Polynesian Panthers.. In this edited extract, she looks at the political and social climate that gave rise to the raids — and the circumstances that led to both JOE HARAWIRA: HEALING THE WORLD THROUGH STORY Joe Harawira from Whakatāne (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto, Tūhourangi) has transfixed many a class of Kiwi schoolkids.Overseas audiences, too. Telling and performing our Māori stories in reo Pākehā and reo Māori. And making some of the theatrical moves he’s seen from koroua in the course of their whaikōrero on the marae.CURRICULUM ARCHIVES
About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: RESTORING A LIFELINE Kennedy Warne is the co-founder and former editor of New Zealand Geographic magazine and the author of Tūhoe: Portrait of a Nation, published in 2013.Kennedy has written extensively about the connections between people and place, past and present, both in Aotearoa, the Pacific and elsewhere. JAMES PAPALI'I: THE ROAD TO CHANGE James Papali’i is used to helping people who’ve taken a few wrong turns. That’s his role as a social worker in South Auckland. But there’s more to him than his training and qualifications. WHAIKŌRERO WITH SUBTITLES Ruakere Hond, with Taranaki in the background, was among those who delivered their whaikōrero for Huirangi Waikerepuru’s virtual tangihanga on TVNZ’s Marae programme. (Screenshot) It’s difficult to imagine a more serious spiritual transgression than removing the right to a tangi, writes Vanessa Ellingham.MUMA ARCHIVES
About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: FOCUSING ON THE WRONG END OF THE PROBLEM Teachers "don’t realise they spend more time with Asian and Pākehā students. Māori students see it, though, and retreat to the back of the classroom, where they sit in groups and disengage.” — AntonBlank.
MAY THE SHIMMER OF LIGHT GUIDE YOU ON YOUR WAY May peace be widespread, may the sea glisten like greenstone, and may the shimmer of light guide you on your way, Che Baby. Becky Manawatu (Ngāi Tahu/ Pākehā) was born in Nelson and raised in Waimangaroa on the West Coast. After nearly two decades away, she returned home to Waimangaroa, where she lives with her husband, two children and dad. KAUPAPA MĀORI ARCHIVES About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: E-TANGATA - A MĀORI AND PASIFIKA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The Māori voice comes in English as well as te reo. by E-Tangata. “English is the language that reaches all the politicians and the voters, including the journalists and teachers and lawyers and doctors and nurses and academics and business leaders ELLA HENRY: CREATING A NEW AOTEAROA Ella Henry: Creating a new Aotearoa. Dr Ella Henry, photographed in her office at AUT’s Business School. (Photo: Cornell Tukiri ©) In this kōrero with Dale Husband, Dr Ella Henry acknowledges that there was a big slice of her life when she wasn’t all that productive. She bummed around, she says. WHAIKŌRERO WITH SUBTITLES Ruakere Hond, with Taranaki in the background, was among those who delivered their whaikōrero for Huirangi Waikerepuru’s virtual tangihanga on TVNZ’s Marae programme. (Screenshot) It’s difficult to imagine a more serious spiritual transgression than removing the right to a tangi, writes Vanessa Ellingham. ALISON JONES, AUTHOR AT E-TANGATA About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: JOE HARAWIRA: HEALING THE WORLD THROUGH STORY Joe Harawira: Healing the world through story. Joe Harawira: “I came to the realisation that my destiny was to help heal the world through story.”. Joe Harawira from Whakatāne (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto, Tūhourangi) has transfixed many a class of Kiwi schoolkids. Overseas audiences, too.WILLIE TE AHO
Willie Te Aho – Moments of gold. Being a negotiator for any iwi on a Treaty of Waitangi settlement isn’t for the faint-hearted. The Crown negotiators don’t bring a lot of aroha to the discussions. Not a lot of understanding either of the 1840 deal and our country’s history. Or, if they do, they’re aware that their political bosses HOW CAN THERE BE JUSTICE IF THE PROCESS ISN'T JUST? How can there be justice if the process isn’t just? Moana Maniapoto with Chris Finlayson, Margaret Mutu, and Chris McKenzie, on Te Ao with Moana. Through the years, the mainstream media has had trouble applying itself to the task of calling the Crown to account for downplaying the Treaty. BOBBIE HUNTER: MATHS BELONGS IN EVERY CULTURE Bobbie Hunter: Maths belongs in every culture. Professor Bobbie Hunter: “I’d like education to be immune from political change. We might get somewhere then, in terms of equity.”. It’s been dubbed “Bobbie maths”, a culturally attuned, internationally recognised approach to teaching maths that’s been making a difference in low PRUE KAPUA: WE HAVE TO STEP UP AS MĀORI Prue Kapua: We have to step up as Māori. Prue Kapua has been “stepping up” for a good many years now — opting for law as a career, taking on some difficult opponents in the Environment Court, and, late last year, becoming the president of the Māori Women’s Welfare League. She has had frustrations along the way, but there havebeen
RICKY HOUGHTON: I’D HEARD ALL ABOUT THE FAR NORTH BEING Ricky Houghton didn’t have a charmed life as a boy. But he learned a lot from the years when he was running foul of the community and the cops, during his time in various state institutions. For some years now, after a 17-year apprenticeship with the Waipareira Trust, he’s been encouraging his people in the Far North to take a good look at E-TANGATA - A MĀORI AND PASIFIKA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The Māori voice comes in English as well as te reo. by E-Tangata. “English is the language that reaches all the politicians and the voters, including the journalists and teachers and lawyers and doctors and nurses and academics and business leaders ELLA HENRY: CREATING A NEW AOTEAROA Ella Henry: Creating a new Aotearoa. Dr Ella Henry, photographed in her office at AUT’s Business School. (Photo: Cornell Tukiri ©) In this kōrero with Dale Husband, Dr Ella Henry acknowledges that there was a big slice of her life when she wasn’t all that productive. She bummed around, she says. WHAIKŌRERO WITH SUBTITLES Ruakere Hond, with Taranaki in the background, was among those who delivered their whaikōrero for Huirangi Waikerepuru’s virtual tangihanga on TVNZ’s Marae programme. (Screenshot) It’s difficult to imagine a more serious spiritual transgression than removing the right to a tangi, writes Vanessa Ellingham. ALISON JONES, AUTHOR AT E-TANGATA About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: JOE HARAWIRA: HEALING THE WORLD THROUGH STORY Joe Harawira: Healing the world through story. Joe Harawira: “I came to the realisation that my destiny was to help heal the world through story.”. Joe Harawira from Whakatāne (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto, Tūhourangi) has transfixed many a class of Kiwi schoolkids. Overseas audiences, too.WILLIE TE AHO
Willie Te Aho – Moments of gold. Being a negotiator for any iwi on a Treaty of Waitangi settlement isn’t for the faint-hearted. The Crown negotiators don’t bring a lot of aroha to the discussions. Not a lot of understanding either of the 1840 deal and our country’s history. Or, if they do, they’re aware that their political bosses HOW CAN THERE BE JUSTICE IF THE PROCESS ISN'T JUST? How can there be justice if the process isn’t just? Moana Maniapoto with Chris Finlayson, Margaret Mutu, and Chris McKenzie, on Te Ao with Moana. Through the years, the mainstream media has had trouble applying itself to the task of calling the Crown to account for downplaying the Treaty. BOBBIE HUNTER: MATHS BELONGS IN EVERY CULTURE Bobbie Hunter: Maths belongs in every culture. Professor Bobbie Hunter: “I’d like education to be immune from political change. We might get somewhere then, in terms of equity.”. It’s been dubbed “Bobbie maths”, a culturally attuned, internationally recognised approach to teaching maths that’s been making a difference in low PRUE KAPUA: WE HAVE TO STEP UP AS MĀORI Prue Kapua: We have to step up as Māori. Prue Kapua has been “stepping up” for a good many years now — opting for law as a career, taking on some difficult opponents in the Environment Court, and, late last year, becoming the president of the Māori Women’s Welfare League. She has had frustrations along the way, but there havebeen
RICKY HOUGHTON: I’D HEARD ALL ABOUT THE FAR NORTH BEING Ricky Houghton didn’t have a charmed life as a boy. But he learned a lot from the years when he was running foul of the community and the cops, during his time in various state institutions. For some years now, after a 17-year apprenticeship with the Waipareira Trust, he’s been encouraging his people in the Far North to take a good look at THE TERROR OF THE DAWN RAIDS The Dawn Raids of 1974 and 1976 were “the most blatantly racist attack on Pacific peoples by the New Zealand government in New Zealand’s history”, writes Dr Melani Anae in her new book, The Platform: The Radical Legacy of the Polynesian Panthers.. In this edited extract, she looks at the political and social climate that gave rise to the raids — and the circumstances that led to both MORIORI: STILL SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT Moriori: Still setting the record straight. Tommy Solomon’s statue on Rēkohu. The myths and misunderstandings around Moriori have proved remarkably resistant to evidence. But, as Moriori leader Maui Solomon writes, that’s only one of the battles Moriori continue to face in their long struggle for peace and justice. JOE HARAWIRA: HEALING THE WORLD THROUGH STORY Joe Harawira from Whakatāne (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Maniapoto, Tūhourangi) has transfixed many a class of Kiwi schoolkids.Overseas audiences, too. Telling and performing our Māori stories in reo Pākehā and reo Māori. And making some of the theatrical moves he’s seen from koroua in the course of their whaikōrero on the marae.CURRICULUM ARCHIVES
About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: RESTORING A LIFELINE Kennedy Warne is the co-founder and former editor of New Zealand Geographic magazine and the author of Tūhoe: Portrait of a Nation, published in 2013.Kennedy has written extensively about the connections between people and place, past and present, both in Aotearoa, the Pacific and elsewhere.MUMA ARCHIVES
About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to: JAMES PAPALI'I: THE ROAD TO CHANGE James Papali’i is used to helping people who’ve taken a few wrong turns. That’s his role as a social worker in South Auckland. But there’s more to him than his training and qualifications. FOCUSING ON THE WRONG END OF THE PROBLEM Teachers "don’t realise they spend more time with Asian and Pākehā students. Māori students see it, though, and retreat to the back of the classroom, where they sit in groups and disengage.” — AntonBlank.
WHAIKŌRERO WITH SUBTITLES Ruakere Hond, with Taranaki in the background, was among those who delivered their whaikōrero for Huirangi Waikerepuru’s virtual tangihanga on TVNZ’s Marae programme. (Screenshot) It’s difficult to imagine a more serious spiritual transgression than removing the right to a tangi, writes Vanessa Ellingham. KAUPAPA MĀORI ARCHIVES About. E-Tangata is an online Sunday magazine specialising in stories that reflect the experiences of Māori and Pasifika in Aotearoa. Contact. We welcome submissions or inquiries to:TRENDING:
Eliota: Sad days at Auckland Grammar The TPPA is a game changer Saana Murray — and an awakening for a Pākehā*
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KŌRERO
TIMOTI KARETU: A STICKLER FOR STANDARDS by Wena Harawira | Oct27, 2019 | 0
“All the Māori students at Victoria wanted to be lawyers and accountants, but I only ever wanted to be a teacher.” — Sir TimotiKaretu.
GULED MIRE: WORKING FOR A MORE WELCOMING AOTEAROA by Dale Husband | Oct27, 2019 | 0
“It’s incredibly important, now more than ever, that we strive to become a more welcoming and compassionate nation.”VIDEO
KŌRERO
WAITOHIARIKI QUAYLE: ‘YEP, I CAN DO THIS’Oct 13, 2019
“I thought: ‘There's nothing stopping me from doing this, is there? If I've got a Bible and a prayer book to help me, then, yep, Ican do this.’”
JADE KAKE: MĀORI BY DESIGNOct 6, 2019
“There’s a lot of ways that Māori design can be woven into a building. But I think the essential thing is that whoever holds mana whenua in that area is engaged in the process." TIM TIPENE: MY TEACHER CHANGED MY LIFE FOREVEROct 6, 2019
“Their idea was to send me to school to beat other kids up — and that didn't go down too well with the teachers.” HIRIA TE RANGI: STUBBORN HAS TO BE THE BEST TRAIT EVERSep 29, 2019
“Only Māori have Māori insights. There’s still the routine where other cultures think they can build things for us. But that’s a no. Kāhore.” — Hiria Te Rangi, CEO of Whare Hauora.COMMENT & ANALYSIS
‘THEY TRAVEL WITH SHADOWS’by Morgan Godfery
“Their tūpuna inhabit every room they enter, they embody every act, and they help guide every word.” WHY WE SHOULD CARE ABOUT RETIREMENT POLICYby Peter Cordtz
“The simplicity and universality of the NZ Superannuation model is the envy of many across the world, but it doesn’t address the needs of all — nor is it guaranteed to be sustainable without refinement.” — Peter Cordtz, interim Retirement Commissioner. WHY AREN’T UNIVERSITIES MADE FOR PEOPLE LIKE ME? by Sereana Naepi & Tara McAllister “The longer I stay at university, the more I realise that not only are universities not made for me, but there are institutional structures embedded within them that actively exclude me." A TIKA MĀORI APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGE ACTIONby Dale Husband
“The Treaty relationship needs to underpin the Climate Change Commission — and in fact, all the commissioners should be bound by Treaty obligations, such as to actively protect Māori rights.”REFLECTIONS
HEARING THE OCEAN SPEAKby Kennedy Warne
“We have come here to speak about protection of the ocean. We come in the planet’s most uncertain hours to sing a redemptive tune. And what is it we are protecting the ocean against? Regrettably, us.” IS OUR MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM MAKING US CRAZY? by Kiri Tamihere-Waititi “We've somehow arrived at a point where normal life events are catastrophised and the only people deemed able to fix those catastrophes are the professions that start with ‘psych’.” THE ONE PLACE I FELT SAFEby Tim Tipene
“I did not want to go home. Because I knew that when I went home someone was going to be angry, someone was going to fight, and someone was going to get hurt.” IHUMĀTAO FEELS LIKE HOW I WISH AUCKLAND FELTby Simone Kaho
“I can’t think of a time I’ve been in such a mixed group. There is a vibe of considerateness, gentleness. People are careful with the kids, and with each other. If you make eye contact, people say 'Kia ora', even if you don’t say it first.”IDENTITY
‘DON’T YOU WANT TO BE SĀMOAN?’by Dahlia Malaeulu
“Except for church, our Sāmoan-ness never made it out the front door of our house.” I’VE TRIED TO LEARN TONGAN, AND I’VE TRIED TO BE TONGANby Simone Kaho
"Being an outsider because of my personality quirks was an identity I could embrace. Better than being defined purely by my lack of culture and language. Give me Crazy Pālangi over plain Pālangi any day." MY MOTHER IS PĀKEHĀ — AND I LOVE HERby Ataria Sharman
When I hear a child saying she hates Pākehā, it doesn’t sit right with me. It’s the same when I hear people referring to the “bloodyPākehās”.
OLD CERTAINTIES, OLD PREJUDICES, OLD FEARS ARE LOSING THEIR GRIPby Kennedy Warne
The good news is that the country seems to be in a process of recovery — and for Pākehā, discovery — of the Māori conceptual world.REO
ONE REO TO RULE THEM ALL?by Quinton Hita
“If the best resources on offer for our children aren’t in our dialect, then how the heck does dialect survive?” — Quinton Hita on the unintended consequences of the project to translate titles like 'Harry Potter' into Māori. A TONGAN WITHOUT THE TONGUE — A CAUTIONARY TALEby Koro Vaka'uta
"Rightly or wrongly, my father was trying to protect us from a world that treasured English above all else, that used English as a markerfor intelligence."
I’M GOOD AT LANGUAGES — SO WHY CAN’T I SPEAK SĀMOAN? by Tupe Solomon-Tanoa'i “Many of us have lost our languages through no fault of our own. Let’s remove the shame from reclaiming our languages.” RAWIRI WRIGHT: IT’S COOL TO BE MĀORIby Dale Husband
“I believe absolutely that the Kura Kaupapa Māori Aho Matua is the way forward for us to revitalise and regenerate ourselves asMāori.”
MEDIA
INDIRA STEWART: WHEN ONE OF US WINS, ALL OF US WINby Dale Husband
“When I think about the shortage of Pasifika journalists, I'm a bit surprised there aren't more of us, because we're powerful storytellers and we always have been.”—Indira Stewart, host of RNZ's new morning news show First Up. THIS IS NOT THE TIME FOR WHITE VOICESby Steve Braunias
“Everyone has their say in a democracy. But mostly the people who have their say in public life in New Zealand are white.”—SteveBraunias
CONVERSATIONS: LIFTING OUR VOICESby Tapu Misa
Our stories create the lens through which we see ourselves and our neighbours and the world around us. CONVERSATIONS: IT’S ABOUT SERVING OUR COMMUNITIESby Simone Kaho
“Our women look at people as if everyone is important and everyone belongs to one of the communities they serve.”ARTS
KERRY WARKIA: A CHORUS OF PACIFIC VOICESby Dale Husband
“In filmmaking, the essence is collaboration. For something to be really good, there needs to be different perspectives, techniques and skills from lots of different people.” LANI WENDT YOUNG: A HUNGER WORLDWIDE FOR OUR STORIES TOLD BY USby Dale Husband
“There are lots of silly excuses that people offer for why there aren’t more of us published. They say, for instance, that we don’t like to write. We aren’t storytellers. We’re not readers. But that’s ridiculous.” KURA FORRESTER: RUDELY FUNNYby Dale Husband
“Everybody knows what it's like to be on a first date. Or have rude thoughts. And, as long as you're being honest, it can be funny.” — Kura Forrester, Billy T award winner. WHITI HEREAKA: MY ADVICE? LET YOURSELF WRITE TERRIBLYby Dale Husband
“It's okay to be a bad writer in your first draft because a lot of the craft of writing is in the rewriting.”HISTORY
RUA KĒNANA AND THE TEACHING OF HISTORYby Kennedy Warne
The move to make the teaching of history compulsory, “will not produce lasting benefit unless history comes to be seen not as information to be learned and then set aside, but as a force that shapes identity and influences choices.” RESTORING MANA AND CONFIDENCEby Moana Maniapoto
“We want to work shoulder to shoulder with this government rather than head-to-head headbutting.” — Ngahiwi Tomoana, Kahungunuleader.
HOW CAN THERE BE JUSTICE IF THE PROCESS ISN’T JUST?by Moana Maniapoto
“If someone had said to me in 2008, I’d be turning the Whanganui River into a legal person — or parliament would be — I would have laughed.” Chris Finlayson, former Treaty negotiations minister. TREATY NEGOTIATORS: NOT A JOB FOR WIMPSby Moana Maniapoto
“It was so stressful. I told my lot I just want to be Pākehā for awhile.”
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