
Recent Updates
Te Aka Poutini Parakuihi
So I missed our beautiful breakfast thanks to Covid however it heard it was teno reka! Everyone got to hear my long-winded Te Hono speech thanks to Hayley.
Love this kaupapa connecting us, helping us to maintain and strengthen our cultural identity here in Te Tai O Poutini.
Also helps us to achieve mauri ora (an active state of wellbeing) as we very rearly get to slow down and do something for ourselves.
Gives us a space to honor the past, living in the present and preparing for the future.
Ill be at the next one!
Mau Rākau
Our Wahine group has started Wednesdays 5-7pm at Lazer Park Hall. This was the week that a lot were away due to illness, so much interest.
Mau Rakau is a traditional Maori martial art that involves the use of weapons such as taiaha (fighting staffs), mere (clubs) and tewhatewha (axes). Mau Rakau means "to bear a weapon" and it is said that the weapons were given by Tane, the god of the forest, and Tu, the god of war. Mau Rakau teaches the skills, values and protocols of the Maori warrior culture. It also helps to preserve and promote Maori language, history and identity. Mau Rakau is practiced in schools, communities and prisons as a way of learning, healing and empowerment.
Kia Kaha, come along and have a look!
Hope, resilience & inspiration during the pandemic.
This week we received this recognition for our COVID-19 mahi.
Covid was the start of our mahi and what a perfect time it was to start. We got to do things differently, thinking outside the mainstream systems and generate solutions that worked best for whānau.
We continue to build on this, grow and shift mainstream ways of thinking to ensure equitable access to services and supports for our whānau in Te Tai O Poutini. “All of us together doing a little bit makes a massive difference.”
Kei roto i te pōuri, te marama e whiti ana.
Mokopuna Ora
Whānau enjoyed a great day at Rewanui Animal Park this week, we will be back. “Relationships and connections are central to Māori and Māori wellbeing. Whanaungatanga is about forming and maintaining relationships and strengthening ties between kin and communities. This value is the essential glue that binds people together, providing the foundation for a sense of unity, belonging and cohesion.”
Youth Pathways
Met with Sarah Fry the ‘Communications Manager’ for MSD to support them creating a video for their MSD team on the benefits of connections with other services in the community like our WC Youth Pathway Service. Really appreciate how hard the team at MSD work and grateful for the strong relationship we are building with the team in Greymouth including Chris Efford (as seen in photo) with their knowledge and support they provide to us and our Rangatahi.
Whānu 2 Whānau
We are so grateful to be a part of such an amazing generous community. Thank you, Hokitika New World and West REAP for your continual support, for our whānau.
Waka Ama @ Dawn
“He hono tangata e kore e motu, kāpā he taura waka, e motu.” “Human connections cannot be broken!”
Rangatahi Fun Day Out!
What a great day out at Shantytown and the movies. So awesome seeing how far they have come and can’t wait to see what else we can achieve together through our mahi together.
Mau te wehi!
We got to have the best experience in Kaikoura with so much whānau on our camp with Hokitika Primary last week, all 84 of us! So grateful!
