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Taonga Pūoro at Wānanga Pūrekireki

Last week Haumanu hosted the first national wānanga since the official reforming of the ‘collective’ at Pūrekireki marae in Pīrongia. By all accounts the wānanga was a success and stands as a new milestone for Haumanu in pursuit of providing a solid foundation for the revitalising of taonga pūoro and the normalisation of these of taonga pūoro in today’s context. 

Taonga Pūoro Wānanga content

This wānanga event has been a goal for Haumanu for sometime and as a collective we wanted to include as many of the important aspects of taonga pūoro as possible including reo, tikanga, taonga pūoro used in colonisation context, taonga pūoro in the environment, taonga pūoro in connection with the ora and higher realms, taonga pūoro in rongoā Māori, the making of taonga pūoro and of course an ever constant would be the playing of taonga pūoro. 

Wānanga Facilitators

Our Haumanu Collective members James Webster, Libby Gray, Horomona Horo, Awhina Tamarapa along with the support team facilitated many of the wānanga proceedings. The Haumanu team were joined by Dr Aroha Yates-Smith, Dr Tom Roa, Charles Royal, Kereti Rautangata, Rikki Solomon, Mahina Kaui and Ngaronoa Renata in presenting various aspects of ‘te ao o Taonga Puōro’ and provided a massive scope of mātauranga in relation to taonga pūoro and te ao Māori Māori.

 In addition to these amazing practitioners the wider whānau in attendance of the wānanga also brought a huge amount of mātauranga to provide an overall amazing experience throughout the week. 

5 Days of Wānanga

Each day started with Karakia Oro, often followed by sessions of playing taonga pūoro together and then parakuihi. Everysingle day of the wānanga was packed full with events including guest speakers, presentations, impromptu performances, wānanga specifically on important aspects of taonga puoro and the making of taonga pūoro. 

Pīrongia hīkoi

Day two of the wānanga involved a hīkoi on Mount Pīrongia where we listened to the sounds of the ngāhere (forest) and mimicked the sounds around us. During this time we were visited by various groups of manu (birds) curious to the sounds that they were hearing. We created performances whilst in the ngāhere and at the close of that made our way along the Mangakara track to the award (river) where we bathed, played and bonded together in the ngāhere playing with the ngāhere. 

Taonga Pūoro making workshops

Everybody came away from the wānanga with new taonga pūoro that they had made. Even the practitioners enjoyed time hands-on enjoying areas of making, playing or kōrero on aspects of taonga pūoro which may not have necessarily been their area of expertise. In this, the whole level of mātauranga was raised throughout all levels of capability throughout the week. 

Ngāhau / Concert

As performers and practitioners we spent the final evening playing music together, performing stories and sharing the sounds of taonga pūoro. This was an amazing evening of performance and play where everyone got involved in some way to share ora reo together . 

Future Taonga Pūoro Wānanga

This wānanga has served as an incredible basis for future wānanga with wānanga planned for later this year in Tāmaki Mākaurau and Te Waipounamu. This will follow a similar format and we will be calling upon more speakers and pooling together similar activities to this one. Keep an eye out on our website and social media channels for invites to these as they are bound to fill fast. 

Over the coming days we will feature more about each day as there is just too much to tell in a single story. 

maoMāori