Media release

“I felt more connected”: One migrant’s journey with Te Reo Māori

MEDIA RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

15 September 2020

“I felt more connected”: One migrant’s journey with Te Reo Māori

For Glenna Casalme, originally from the Philippines, there is something about Te Reo Māori that pulls energy from the ground and puts it directly into her heart.

After arriving in New Zealand in 2008, Glenna felt disconnected and like a floating spirit until Te Reo Māori opened up a different world before her – te ao Māori, the Māori world.

“If you’re a migrant like me, you know what that’s like – to be disconnected from your home – to have no footing, no tūrangawaewae,” Ms Casalme said.

 “Te Reo Māori became my link to New Zealand – ko tōku hononga ki te whenua. The more I studied, the deeper my roots grew.”

Glenna’s Reo journey began in 2009 when she was directing a story for the TV programme Asia Downunder about a Japanese doctorate student learning kapa haka.

“The class was practising the waiata Ki Kō, Ki Kō, and I was instantly taken by Te Reo Māori,” she said.

 As soon as she gained residence status, she began to formally attend classes.

“Despite life being busy, I always managed to get a bit of Reo into my life – through work, the TV, or night classes. A different side of me started to emerge. I gained more confidence as a New Zealander. I felt more connected,” she said.

For Glenna, a current tauira (student) at Te Wānanga o Aotearoa, Te Reo Māori is a taonga – a treasure that has been loaned to her.

“I do not own it. It was not my ancestors who spoke it. So I carry this privilege carefully, with much aroha. If you are fortunate enough to learn it, treat it with respect, and it will keep giving back,” she said.

 “For me, Te Reo is the beginning – the first step in a genuine relationship with the land and its people, and I cannot wait to see where it takes me. Never have I felt more like I belong in Aotearoa,” she said.

Glenna Casalme shared her personal journey with Te Reo Māori as part of the Shaping our futures together – Kia Hono hui co-hosted by Belong Aotearoa and Te Wānanga o Aotearoa this week.

The hui celebrated and encouraged use of Te Reo Māori across newcomer communities, people from migrant and refugee backgrounds, to support a strong sense of belonging.

According to Rahul Watson Govindan, Chair of Belong Aotearoa, every one of us can contribute to the revitalisation of the language and it will nourish every one of us in return.

“Through Te Reo Māori we can build relationships and strengthen solidarity between tangata whenua and tangata tiriti – and create communities where people have a true sense of belonging,” he said.

“I hope the hui inspired people from diverse backgrounds to start their Te Reo Māori journey or progress their journey even further,” Mr Watson Govindan said.

Te Wānanga o Aotearoa Executive Director, Marketing & Tauira Services, Hone Paul says supporting Belong Aotearoa is proving to be an inspiration.

“The stories we hear from people who are finding Te Reo Māori helps them settle into life in Aotearoa while also honouring their own whakapapa are heartwarming. We value the diversity they bring and while they learn from us, we also learn from them. Together we are moving forward together into a brighter future.”

 

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Belong Aotearoa is a non-profit innovation and social change hub working to address systemic barriers to positive settlement and inclusion so newcomer migrants and former refugees can contribute to NZ’s collective wellbeing and prosperity & feel a true sense of belonging.

The ‘Shaping our futures together - Kia Hono’ hui are a partnership between Belong Aotearoa and Te Wānanga o Aotearoa to strengthen relationships, allyship and cross-cultural collaboration between tangata whenua and migrant and refugee background communities.

 

Media contact:

Malu Malo-Fuiava

Marcomms and Fundraising Manager

communications@belong.org.nz

09-625 2440 extn. 4

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Belong Aotearoa alongside leading organisations working in the resettlement (refugee background) sector is calling on the New Zealand Government to play a greater role in responding to the international refugee crisis, ahead of the Global Refugee Forum (Geneva, December 17 – 18, 2019).

 

The open letter signed by members of civil society, former refugee leaders, resettlement, humanitarian and faith-based organisations calls on the Government to commit to three pledges that will advance the objectives of the Global Compact on Refugees which New Zealand is signed to. The three pledges are:

 

  1. Strengthen former refugee leadership, including youth leadership and capacity, in policy-making;

  2. Establish the Community Organisation Refugee Sponsorship category as a permanent and additional pathway in New Zealand’s broader refugee and humanitarian programme;

  3. Increase the number of places available per year under the Refugee Family Support Category.

 

Rochana Sheward, CEO, Belong Aotearoa, said: “Aotearoa New Zealand has a long history of providing a safe home for people seeking refuge from conflict, disaster, persecution, violence and violations of human rights. We may be a small nation, but we have the capacity to have an even greater impact on the international refugee crisis.”

 

“The Global Refugee Forum is an opportunity to pledge to do more and at the same time enhance the resettlement, integration and inclusion of former refugees in Aotearoa New Zealand,” she said.

 

“The three pledges will help build an inclusive Aotearoa where resettled communities have positive resettlement experiences, feel welcomed, connected, valued and respected in their new home and have opportunities to participate and contribute meaningfully.

 

“People from refugee backgrounds bring incredible strengths, knowledge, skills & resilience to this country and their contributions to communities all over Aotearoa New Zealand need to be acknowledged and valued,” Mrs Sheward said.

 

 

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Belong Aotearoa (formerly known as Auckland Regional Migrant Services) focuses on enhancing successful settlement, integration and inclusion for newcomers (both migrant and refugee background) through addressing the systemic barriers such as social isolation, underemployment and racism and discrimination.

 

Belong Aotearoa is a member of the Auckland Resettlement Sector Steering Group (ARSSG) which brings together representatives of key agencies in the Auckland resettlement sector to enhance interagency collaboration, strengthen the collective voice of resettled (refugee-background) communities and advocate for improved support and services.

 

 

 

Media contact:

Malu Malo-Fuiava

Marcomms and Fundraising Manager

communications@belong.org.nz

09-625 2440 extn. 904