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Home / Northern Advocate

He Kura, Kaitāia’s newest kaupapa Māori hauora and oranga space, opens

Northern Advocate
22 Jul, 2024 02:00 AM4 mins to read

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He Kura is the dream of Native Sports Performance and Whitirau Cross101.

He Kura is the dream of Native Sports Performance and Whitirau Cross101.

He Kura, the dawn promise of a healthier, thriving Te Hiku, was lit up for Matāriki as Kaitāia’s newest kaupapa Māori hauora and oranga space opened recently.

“I can already feel the love in this room,” a visually moved Native Sports Performance director and former Black Fern Rawinia Everitt said as she paid tribute to the many people who designed, created and came together to celebrate the opening of He Kura.

He Kura is the dream of Native Sports Performance and Whitirau Cross101, a collaboration of tāngata toa on a mission to build the health, wellbeing and connections of whānau across Te Hiku ō Te Ika.

The hub would serve as a space from which to craft sustainable, healthy futures for the hapori from a mātauranga Māori foundation base, Everitt said.

“We wanted this to be a place where anything is possible. We wanted to show that you can pursue your dreams from home. Everything you need is right here and you don’t have to go away to achieve them,” she says.

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Native Sports Performance was born out of a vision that Everitt — a former NZ Rugby Union and netball representative — has long nurtured to fill a gap in the community, providing pathways for young people and whānau wanting to pursue and excel in sport in the Far North.

What began as an initiative to lend her own expertise to help build leaders in sports and physical activity has evolved rapidly into a multi-faceted movement manned by a team of experts offering everything from cabin building via the Fire Project to waka ama training, from kuta harvesting to ongoing health and fitness challenges.

She said that was just the beginning for an initiative that had largely grown with minimal funding, off the goodwill of a group of like-minded people with shared whakapapa to Te Hiku. “What makes Natives different is that we operate a people-centred model. We do what our people want to do. Our people provide the feedback in terms of what they’re needing or the barriers they’re facing. And we design our programmes and initiatives around that feedback,” Everitt said.

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Former Black Fern loose forward Rawinia Everitt was a powerful force on the field. Now she’s using her experience and knowledge to inspire the next generation at He Kura, Kaitāia’s newest kaupapa Māori hauora and oranga space.
Former Black Fern loose forward Rawinia Everitt was a powerful force on the field. Now she’s using her experience and knowledge to inspire the next generation at He Kura, Kaitāia’s newest kaupapa Māori hauora and oranga space.

He Kura is a multifunctional, fit-for-purpose building that has been fitted out by a team of mostly wāhine building apprentices over a five-week building blitz. The results are a series of multi-use spaces that can serve a range of purposes, from sewing classes and carpentry, to wānanga workshops and fitness and training facilities. These will include the rangatahi-focused programmes and activities that will be rolled out over the next 12 months under the Taikorihi locality.

Taikorihi is one of 12 localities set up nationwide under the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act to lead health reforms in the area geographically bound by the iwi boundaries of Ngāti Kuri, Te Aupōuri, NgāiTakoto, Te Rarawa and Ngāti Kahu.

Native Sports Performance and Whitirau Cross100 are collaborating under the prototype to provide a set of programmes and activities targeting the health and wellbeing of Te Hiku taitamariki. He Kura will serve as its base and some of the planned kaupapa include sports clinics and workshops, community sports leagues, CrossFit sessions, one-on-one mentoring and sports camps.

Everitt said a key focus would be in the revitalisation and restoration of traditional knowledge and practices in the hearts and minds of young people.

“They’re our future. They’re going to be making decisions on behalf of who we leave behind. We have a duty to help shape, mentor them and get something right for them so they can lead in multiple spaces. If we don’t have an inclusive environment where our rangatahi feel like they have a voice right now, then how do we expect them to lead in the future?”

He Kura is at 24 Commerce St, Kaitāia. For more information, go to https://www.facebook.com/nativesportsp.


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