"The time has come for us to build on Te Wiki o te Reo, and to extend out to a month. Mahuru Māori is about empowering ourselves to speak our language unapologetically. People reference the ZePA model, which talks about 'right-shifting' the critical mass; from zero, to passive, to active. Shifting is great, but we need to be more proactive."
Enter, stage right, Te Taura Whiri I Te Reo Māori, the Māori Language Commission. The tread lightly approach of the commission seems to have paid off with its "Māori Language Moments" campaign currently tracking above average.
By midday, Day 1 of their busiest week of the year, online activity at www.reomaori.co.nz shattered the digital ceiling, earning more than 1 million registrations, with 200,000 of those registering by morning tea. Professor Rawinia Higgins, chairwoman and language revitalisation expert, was amazed at how taking "a moment" has resonated with the masses.
"The government's goal is to have 1 million speakers by 2040. This is a pulse test to see where we are at, where are people's attitudes and support for te reo. I am overwhelmed by the country's response."
Covid-19 forced the commission to think differently about the way it engaged with different communities. Where previous campaigns usually pulled crowds of 20,000-25,000 people to live events, the online platform not only surpassed expectations, it underscored their trajectory to normalising the language.
"Language revitalisation takes three generations. It is a long journey. We are also trying to support changing some of the systemic elements and making sure that policy thinks about te reo more broadly with our government agencies," says Higgins.
So, has Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori reached its use-by date? No. It is necessary. While the commission wholeheartedly supports Mahuru Māori, the idea of formalising a Māori Language Month in place of a week is not part of their immediate plan. They acknowledge, however, their common end game.
If people are able to see themselves using te reo Māori in their everyday lives, and can continue to do so without relying on the prompts of a Māori Language Week, Month or Year, then every language strategy ever devised will have collectively achieved the ultimate aspiration where every day is a Māori language day.
Karley Hemopo is a bilingual freelance journalist with 20 years of media and communications experience. Her whakapapa (genealogy) links her to Tainui, Aotea, Ngāti Whātua and Ngāti Hine.
Colour me in
Parewai Pahewa Johnson, a pupil at Te Kura Kaupapa ō Te Kōtuku, has drawn this illustration depicting te reo Māori at the heart of everything. Click here to open a larger format that can be downloaded.