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  • Rights: Crown copyright
    Published 18 November 2020 Referencing Hub media
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    Te ao Māori (the Māori world view) recognises the connections between all living and non-living things. In this video, kairangahau Māori share some of their repo connections with us.

    Questions for discussion:

    • Cheri and Rob talk about memories. What role do memories play in repo restoration?
    • Yvonne and Shannon talk about repo as repositories or places to store things. What types of things (physical and non-physical) were stored in repo?

    Transcript

    Cheri van Schravendijk-Goodman

    There is this thing within western science where we tend to reduce things into their parts. It’s not necessarily a bad thing – it allows you to hone your expertise in those areas without becoming overwhelmed by the whole. The challenge, though, is our species, especially our birds and our fish, don’t know boundaries like we have classified them as. So they don’t know that that’s a wetland delineation versus a terrestrial, which is land. Tuna, if it’s in a flood, it’s going to go across the paddock when it’s hungry. The thing for us is about making sure that all those parts are connected.

    Robert McGowan

    You’ve got to look at the environment not as a thing or a resource but as a living person. We talk about Papatūānuku being mother. Every culture talks about Mother Earth. The Earth is your mother, and she has cared for you right from the very beginning.

    Cheri van Schravendijk-Goodman

    Repo were places where practices were undertaken. I can’t speak for all hapū and iwi obviously, but those that we have worked with have shared with us the strong connection in terms of the way they used to interact with our valued fish species, especially tuna, but also our birds. It was part of the whole storyscape, the memoryscape of that area that we interacted with.

    We are a mua/muri people, ao we are very much a past/future people. We don’t tend to look at ourselves in the present, because as soon as you do that, you become bound to 3 to 5-year programmes of action. If we always remind ourselves of where we’ve come from, then we can take those learnings forward into a future that we want for our next generations.

    Robert McGowan

    The memories tell us how it used to be and will actually help people to remember how these places were important to them and the stories there.

    Yvonne Taura

    Fully functioning, healthy repo are repositories for mātauranga. Everything here, our birds, our plants, our wai, everything in and above it tells us the story of why it was so important for our whānau, our tūpuna to engage with. These kept our whānau alive, these kept our tūpuna alive.

    Shannon Te Huia

    They were like our fridge. And this is just coming from uncles and kaumātua that it was a source where they’d go and get duck eggs, where they’d get tuna, birds – everything that would sustain our people.

    Cheri van Schravendijk-Goodman

    They were part of our medicine cabinet, so our rongoā were also found in there. They’re also really important spaces for sharing kōrero about who we are as people – so a chance to sit down and interact with each other and share information across generations about where we came from, what made us unique, what values were important to us and the way that we interacted with our environment. They were also really important spaces for harvesting non-animal or non-plant-like resources, like our paru, our kōkōwai, which we use for dyeing and other things. They had value for being spaces where we could store our taonga or protect our taonga.

    Shannon Te Huia

    The chemical make-up of the repo would preserve the wood and stuff, so it’s no surprise that carvings and stuff are found in wetlands.

    Dr Beverly Clarkson

    It was a huge learning curve to realise that Māori know a lot about wetlands, there’s a lot of traditional knowledge. And the mātauranga perspective enriched our understanding of wetlands, and it’s a way forward to look after all our wetlands in the future.

    Shannon Te Huia

    With your basket and my basket, we will reinvigorate our awa working together. Nā tō rourou, nā taku rourou, ka ora ai te awa.

    Acknowledgements

    Illustration, Papatūānuku sleeping, by Trina Wiriha, Ako Learning Resources
    Illustration, Papatūānuku being separated from Ranginui by their children, by Sam ‘Ohu Gon
    Illustration of Papatūānuku embracing Ranginui, from the graphic novella Te Orokotimatanga o te Ao, story by Rewi Spraggon, and artwork by Munro Te Whata. Courtesy of Kiwa Digital. Downloads available on Appstore for Apple or Google Play for Android.
    Historical footage, woman harvesting kōura with a whakaweku, 1937, The Footage Company Australia/British Movietone
    Historical still, gathering sea food, possibly in Paihia. Denton, Frank J, 1869–1963: Collection of negatives, prints and albums. Ref: 1/2-008468-G. Alexander Turnbull Library
    Historical photo, women fishing for matamata on the Waikato River near Tuakau. James Cowan, The Maori: yesterday and to-day. Wellington: Whitcombe & Tombes, 1930. Sourced from Te Reo o Te Repo – The Voice of the Wetland
    Close-up photo, Kawakawa leaves, Jon Sullivan, CC BY-NC 2.0
    Photo, kawakawa tincture soaking, Jamie Watson

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