Language Monday: Māori
Monday, June 25th, 2018June 25, 2018
The Māori are the indigenous (native) people of New Zealand. New Zealand is also known by the traditional Māori name Aotearoa. Te Reo, the Māori language, is a Polynesian language that evolved in isolation in New Zealand over hundreds of years. The language is most closely related to the languages of the Society and Cook Islands more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) to the northeast in the Pacific Ocean. Most scholars believe Māori first settled New Zealand around A.D. 1200. According to Māori tradition, however, they began arriving more than 1,800 years ago. They arrived in huge, double-hulled seafaring canoes.
The Māori language of Te Reo was traditionally only oral. There was no writing system. Stories were passed down through generations via songs, called waiata, which commemorated important events. Other tales and traditions were communicated through carvings, weaving, and tattooing.
By the 1700′s, all New Zealand was populated by different Māori groups. Most lived in small isolated villages, where people fished and hunted and also grew crops. Each group had a traditional territory, and conflict between groups was common. Relationships between groups were established and maintained through large gatherings and elaborate rituals to celebrate various rites of passage.
Māori gatherings often begin with a ritual greeting called pōwhiri. This ceremonial greeting usually starts outside the marae, the open meeting ground at the center of a Māori village. As visitors arrive, a warrior from the host village will challenge guests, to see whether they are friend or foe. He may be armed with a spear, but he will also lay down a small leafy branch before the visitors. The visitors pick up the token to show that they come in peace. This initial ritual is followed by various calls by the hosts and responses by the visitors as they enter the marae. After everyone is seated, a series of speeches and songs follows, usually from elders of each group. Once the speeches are completed, the visitors present their hosts a gift. The ceremony ends with a hongi—the traditional Māori touching of noses—and food is shared.
In the early 1800’s, Te Reo was the predominant language spoken in New Zealand. As more English speakers arrived in New Zealand, the Māori language was increasingly confined to Māori communities. Over time, the Māori language was suppressed in schools, either formally or informally, in an attempt to ensure Māori children would assimilate with the wider European community in New Zealand. By the mid-1900’s, linguists were concerned that the Māori language was at risk of disappearing.
Beginning in the early 1970’s, a number of Māori student organizations initiated a revival of their traditional language. On Sept. 14, 1972, the organizations petitioned Parliament to request that Māori language classes be offered in schools. Beginning in 1975, this event has been recognized and celebrated during Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori (Māori language week). In 1978, New Zealand’s first bilingual school opened at Rūātoki. The first Māori-owned Māori-language radio station hit the airwaves in 1983. Today, about 125,000 people of Māori ethnicity speak and understand Te Reo. It is also recognized as one of the three official languages of New Zealand, along with English and New Zealand Sign Language.