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SPONSORS | KAITAUTOKO (2024)

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Te Mātāwai supports kāinga, hapori and iwi to identify, pursue and fulfil their own Māori language aspirations through their investment programme, building a strong knowledge base and demonstrating leadership to support the revitalisation of the Māori language.
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Aotearoa Reorua supports towns and cities across New Zealand to become bilingual centres. Councils and their mana whenua partners come together to develop a bilingual strategy for their centre and to create more spaces, places and opportunities where te reo Māori is seen, heard and celebrated alongside the English language.
 
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Te Taiwhenua o Heretaunga is a family-focused organisation. We’ve been working with whānau to achieve their goals and general wellbeing for more than 38 years.

We help individuals, whānau and communities by creating holistic, personalised plans of care, support and development.

We’re based in Hastings, but our workforce of over 480 with around 80% Māori employees who are involved with people and communities along the East Coast from Te Mahia to Remutaka, and across to Palmerston North.

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The Department of Internal Affairs serves and connects people, communities and government to build a safe, prosperous and respected nation.

ko tā te Tari Taiwhenua he whakarato me te hono i ngā iwi, ngā hapori me te kāwanatanga ki te hanga motu haumaru, tōnui, whai mana hoki.

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The Māori Language Commission was set up under the Māori Language Act 1987 and continued under Te Ture Reo Māori 2016 to promote the use of Māori as a living language and as an ordinary means of communication.

 

We are focused upon promoting te reo as a living language and an ordinary means of communication. This includes leading the government’s Māori language strategy and creating conditions for te reo to thrive. We recognise excellence in te reo by certifying licenses for expert translators and interpreters.
 

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Our Ministry is all about helping to build successful individuals, and in turn building strong, healthy families and communities.
It’s a big job - we’re tackling some of the big issues in society, like family violence.

This is not work we do alone. We work closely with other government agencies, non-government organisations, advisory and industry groups, and communities and iwi. Together we aim to make a positive and lasting difference in the lives of New Zealanders.

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Kia māhorahora te reo Māori!

Māori language - every day, every way, everywhere!

Te Māngai Pāho is first and foremost a Māori language agency. Our aim is to whakanui te reo Māori and Māori culture so that te reo Māori and tikanga Māori are spoken, heard, seen and valued.

Kia kaingākautia te reo Māori me te ahurea Māori e Aotearoa whānui.

Māori language and culture is embraced by all New Zealanders.

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Ki te whāngai, ki te whakatipu, ki te manaaki i nga mahi kapa haka kia pūāwai ki ōna taumata.

To foster, develop and protect kapa haka in the pursuit of excellence.​​

Celebrating Kapa Haka Excellence
Showcasing Kapa Haka Excellence
We fund and support regional kapa haka development.
Taking Haka Excellence To The World
We send the best kapa haka overseas to represent Te Matatini and New Zealand at major international events.

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We’re not a university or a polytech. We’re a wānanga. And that’s just a little bit different.

Te Wānanga o Aotearoa has provided a fresh and vibrant alternative within the New Zealand tertiary education sector for 30 years, enhancing the skills and employment opportunities of more than 300,000 graduates.

If you want to learn in an environment that’s been designed for your success and you don’t want to go far from home to do it, this is the place for you.

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We commit ourselves to explore and define the depths of knowledge in Aotearoa, to enable us to re-enrich ourselves, to know who we are, to know where we came from and to claim our place in the future.

We take this journey of discovery, of reclamation of sovereignty, establishing the equality of Māori intellectual tradition alongside the knowledge base of others. Thus, we can stand proudly together with all people of the world.

This is in part the dream and vision of Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi.

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Have you always dreamed of getting a degree or completing your masters but can’t because of time constraints, family commitments or a full time job? Te Wānanga o Raukawa is the place for you. Get a better study, work and lifestyle mix to achieve your academic aspirations through our blended learning approach. Our comprehensive distance learning programmes are complemented by online courses and unique Māori ‘noho’ style residential stays.

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Māori tourism offers you a unique insight into our world that has been shaped by our ancestors, our culture, our traditions, and our environment.

At the heart of it all is manaaki manuhiri - care and respect for all people, from all places. We share with you our stories, our people, our place.

You may arrive as a stranger, but you will leave Aotearoa New Zealand as members of our whānau (family).

Ngāti Whatua

We are Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei, one of the hapū from the wider Ngāti Whātua iwi. Located in and around the Tāmaki isthmus, in the largest city in Aotearoa. We hold firm to our mana motuhake, history, culture, identity and language.

Occupation of Ngāti Whātua in Tāmaki Makaurau began in the 17th Century under the leadership of our rangatira Tuperiri. As such, every member of Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei can trace their whakapapa to our shared ancestor Tuperiri and are descended from the three hapū; Ngā Oho, Te Taoū, me Te Uringutu, collectively referred to as Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei.

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The Mātauranga Iwi Leaders Group (MILG) is the iwi leaders group collective delegated by the National Iwi Chairs Forum (NICF) to identify issues of importance relating to education. 

It is not a decision-making body at the local or regional level, and all iwi and hapū maintain their absolute mana and rangatiratanga over kaupapa and take in their respective rohe.

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Ko tā Te Kōhanga he mahi tahi ki ngā whānau ki te whakaora me te whakapakari i te reo Māori me ōna tikanga.

Ko Te Kōhanga Reo, he wāhi ka āta manaakihia, ka āta poipoia ngā mokopuna me ngā whānau ki tētahi āhuru mōwai e rumakina ai ngā mokopuna ki te reo Māori, ki ngā tikanga.

Te Kōhanga Reo is about whānau working together to revitalise and strengthen te reo Māori me ōna tikanga.

Te Kōhanga Reo means 'the language nest'. It is a place where we care for and nurture our mokopuna alongside whānau in a warm and secure environment and where mokopuna are totally immersed in the Māori language, customs, and values.

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Our Vision

 

Maaku anoo e hanga tooku nei whare 
Ko ngaa pou oo roto he maahoe, he patatee
Ko te taahuhu, he hiinau
Me whakatupu ki te hua o te rengarenga 
Me whakapakari ki te hua o te kawariki.

Our Mission

 

Kia tupu, kia hua, kia puaawai

To grow, prosper and sustain

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Our name represents a continuity between past and present. It draws from the names of the organisations that came together to form this new integrated archive.

Our logo, along with its Takarangi double spiral, evokes a waka huia – a box for storing a person’s most prized possessions – whilst also visually echoing various types of sound and vision: an eye, an ear, a film reel, transmission waves, or a record spinning.

Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision is the operating name for the New Zealand Archive of Film, Television and Sound, Ngā Taonga Whitiāhua Me Ngā Taonga Kōrero.

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Ngāi Tahu are a resilient, entrepreneurial people who made Te Waipounamu (the South Island) their home over 800 years ago. Ngāi Tahu tīpuna (ancestors) were long-distance seafarers, riding the ocean currents and navigating by stars on voyaging waka (ocean going vessels) from Hawaiki Nui. 

In the 21st century, Ngāi Tahu identity continues to evolve and adapt as it has always done. The responsibility of current generations is to honour the deeds and values of our tīpuna and to create an inheritance for future generations. Ngāi Tahu has a responsibility to be steward; to grow and use the resources we have fought to reclaim in order to achieve the culturally rich, boundless future our tīpuna dreamed we could achieve.

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Cinco Cine Film Productions is an independent television production company that continues to produce award-winning dramas, documentaries and children television programmes. At the helm, is the owner and MD Nicole Hoey and at the heart is a dedicated crew committed to entertainment and education. The arena of independent film production is difficult and requires industry expertise to negotiate - we have been working successfully with government funding agencies such as New Zealand on Air, Ministry of Education, Te Mānga Pāho and Television New Zealand for over 21 years. Cinco Cine brings a fresh approach, based on its kaupapa of commitment to the Māori language and independent quality television shows.

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Our vision
Thriving Whānau – when whānau are thriving, so do their communities, hapū, iwi and all of Aotearoa.

Our purpose
Drawing strength from our past to build an Aotearoa New Zealand where whānau can all stand, thrive, and belong.

Our role
Te Puni Kōkiri is the Government’s principal policy advisor on Māori wellbeing and development.

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We are a music rights management organisation
Our licenses help music creators get paid for their work and provide a straightforward way to legally play and copy our music. Royalties keep the music coming and ensure the industry’s future.
 
We pay royalties to music creators when their music is played or copied, both locally and overseas.
Over 119,000 songwriters, composers, and music publishers appoint APRA AMCOS to look after certain rights on their behalf. This means organisations don’t have to contact individual music creators to legally use their music. 

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Ahuriri Hapū have long maintained ahi kā roa in Ahuriri. Te Whanganui-ā-Orotu is a place of great significance to Ahuriri Hapū. It is central to their existence and identity. It is named after the ancestor Te Orotu, who was a descendant of the great explorer ancestor Māhu Tapoanui. Māhu Tapoanui is considered the very beginning of the Ahuriri people. Te Orotu’s son, Whatumamoa, gave his name to Ngāti Whatumamoa, one of the earliest tribal groups that settled the Ahuriri district.

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The Trust began delivering services in 1994 as the result of a close affiliation with the local branch of the Maori Women’s Welfare League and Ngā Kohanga Reo (Maori Language nests). 
 
Our Vision
Healthy, Strong, well-educated and informed communities
 
Our Mission
To fund and provide a broad range of health, education and social services based on Kaupapa Māori practices, in New Zealand and in particular for the people of Ahuriri and broader Ngāti Kahungunu boundaries, with a particular emphasis on meeting the specific needs of Māori.

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We provide community funding and grants to grassroot organisations that help the communities of Tairāwhiti, Hawke’s Bay, Tararua, Wairarapa, Manawatū, and Horowhenua to achieve their goals and aspirations. 

Our aim is to enable transformational change by supporting our communities’ aspirations. Our work drives participation, building stronger, more vibrant and more resilient communities, who have the capability to determine their own futures.

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The Māori language is the cornerstone of Māori culture

The legacy of Hawaiki lives within us. As people of Hawaiki, we inhabit our whakapapa and carry its stories in our very DNA.

We are infused with the values and wisdom of our ancestors, and empowered by the tales of Hawaikirangi, the celestial Hawaiki, and the Hawaiki tangata, the descendants who walk the earth. Hawaikirangi and Hawaiki tangata serve as the foundational pillars of Whakaata Māori.

We are entrusted with the responsibility of sharing the rich stories of our past, present, and future with the world.

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“Maimoatia te reo, maimoatia te iwi.”

Our motto is all about cherishing the language of this land as well as the people in your life.

 

Maimoa Creative is a Māori-owned brand based in Tauranga that is passionate about promoting the Māori language and culture through unique designs, products and resources. We aim to help normalise the use of te reo Māori in everyday life.

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EIT is the tertiary provider for Hawke’s Bay and the East Coast. On offer is an extensive range of programmes of more than 160 postgraduate, degree, diploma and certificate level programmes, across an impressive range of subject areas.

 

When you choose to study at EIT you’ll get the kind of experiences that will help you gain the knowledge and skills to get ahead, whether you want to break into your chosen career or to change direction in your life.

At EIT you’ll get the support you need to make sure you get the rewards for your hard work.  If you’re serious about study and your future, EIT is right behind you.

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