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Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Why Is It Important To Celebrate Matariki

Why Is It Important To Celebrate Matariki


What is matariki?
Matariki is a maori new year celebrated by the maoris from the tiny country of new zealand .
Matariki is the maori name for the clusters of stars called pleiades it rises in the mid winter, for new zealander the maori new year.

How did our tupuna celebrate matariki ?
Traditionally Matariki was celebrated by gathering with family,telling stories from the past and  harvesting with friends and family also celebrating their culture with the rest of the community to remember their whakapapa and people that have past on .

Where do we find the seven sisters of matariki ?
From early June, before sunrise, look to the north-east horizon. Find the constellation Tautoru, or Orion’s belt (sometimes called ‘the pot’). Trace a line northwards from the three stars of Tautoru. Look for a faint sparkle of tiny dots, about the same width as Tautoru is long. This is the Matariki star cluster. Matatiki can also be seen during the summer months in this location of the sky after sunset.

How do we celebrate matariki now ?
Traditionally Matariki was celebrated by gathering with whanau (family) and reflecting on the past. The festival’s connection to the stars provided an opportunity for families to remember their whakapapa (genealogy) and those ancestors who had passed away to the heavens. Offerings were made to land-based gods who would help provide good crops, and new trees were planted to signal new beginnings.

Why is it important to celebrate matariki ?
Matariki was thought to haverst your crop for the coming season, and therefore it was important to recognise the part it played in nature’s cycle. The disappearance of Matariki in Autumn, signaled the time to gather and preserve crops, and so was an important marker in the harvest calendar.







This is the writen form of my speeh- Te Reo Maori should be compulsory in NZ school.



1.What would New Zealand be like with no one talking maori.
Do you reckon that te reo māori should be compulsory? Well I say yes hearing our young tamariki korero the reo of our ancestors is very inspiring, especially for me.

2. Did you know Te Reo, is an Eastern Polynesian language? spoken by the Maori people, the native population of New Zealand.

3. Since 1840, and that was when the treaty of waitangi was signed it has been one of New Zealand's official languages since then.


4. In the past years the Māori language has not really been taught around new zealand schools. At the beginning of the 19th century it was the strongest language spoken in New Zealand.  As more English speakers arrived in New Zealand, the Māori language was increasingly confined to Māori communities.  By the mid-20th century there were concerns that the language was fading away.also we should hold on to our tikanga and our taonga that no one can take from us.

5. The one way we can save our language and keep it alive is if we speak it daily and learn it well we are still young.Otherwise our language slowly die.
That's why i  believe Te Reo Maori should be compulsory in New zealand school

7.   Honestly I have no reasons against why Te Reo Māori shouldn’t be compulsory in New Zealand school.        

wait there a second I have an idea what if Pakeha might think that we're talking bad about them what if the chinese think that we're talking bad about them. This isn't good enough.some of the other cultures might think that we have to learn there language before they learn ours. The other cultures might think we're talking about them. So people lets make a change in our school. .
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