New Zealands Maori party launches campaign to change countrys name to Aotearoa
New Zealandâs official name should be changed to Aotearoa, the Maori name for the country, according to the countryâs Maori party which has launched a petition to that end.
The petition has also called for the countryâs House of Representatives to âofficially restoreâ the te reo Maori (the Maori language) names for all towns, cities and place names in the next five years.
If the changes are made, the national capital would be called Te Whanganiu-a-Tara, Christchurch would become Åtautahi and the largest city of Auckland would be TÄmaki Makaurau, reported news website news.com.au.
âItâs well past time that te reo MÄori was restored to its rightful place as the first and official language of this country. We are a Polynesian country â" we are Aotearoa,â the petition by the party - Te PÄti MÄori - said.
The main aim of the petition is to urge the countryâs Parliament to âchange New Zealand to Aotearoa and begin a process, alongside whÄnau [extended families], hapÅ« [clans or descent groups] and iwi [tribes], local government and the New Zealand Geographic Board to identify and officially restore the original te reo MÄori names for all towns, cities and places right across the country by 2026.â
The petition also cited a decline in language fluency due to the colonial influence that has permeated the countryâs population.
âName changes over our whenua [land] and the imposition of a colonial agenda in the education system in the early 1900s meant that te reo MÄori fluency among our tupuna [grandparent or ancestor] went from 90 per cent in 1910 to 26 per cent in 1950,â the petition said.
âIn only 40 years, the Crown managed to successfully strip us of our language and we are still feeling the impacts of this today. Itâs totally unacceptable that 20 per cent of the MÄori population and 3 per cent of people living in Aotearoa can speak te reo MÄori,â it added.
Maori party leader Rawiri Waititi pushed for the demands to be met.
âNew Zealand is a Dutch name. Even the Dutch have changed their name â" from Holland to the Netherlands, for Christâs sakes!â he was quoted as saying by The Guardian.
Seeking the restoration of the status of the native language, the partyâs petition said: âIt needs to be accessible in the most obvious of places: on our televisions, on our radio stations, on road signs, maps and official advertising, and in our education system.â
The increased use of indigenous culture and language has been supported by locals, authorities and even the countryâs prime minister Jacinda Ardern, who said her daughter will be raised learning both the languages: English and te reo MÄori.
Ms Ardern expressed willingness to accept the native languageâs role in understanding culture.
âWe havenât just made that decision though about how that will happen⦠Itâs an official language. It builds our understanding of MÄori culture as well. For me, language is what sits at the heart of that.â
Ms Ardern has also vowed to increase the awareness of indigenous culture and language with a view to creating a bilingual New Zealand and make te reo MÄori accessible in schools in the next four years.
Some critics, however, have taken exception to the takes on the language and the name âAotearoaâ. Stuart Smith, a member of parliament with the opposition National Party, had earlier sought to prohibit the use of the word by government authorities.
New Zealand has three official languages: English, MÄori and the New Zealand Sign Language.
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