
2024
Day 1
Te awa o te Atua, Kirimatao Paipa
Te Awa Atua refers to the life-giving forces of the female body, particularly within the context of pre-colonial Māori beliefs.
Mana o te Tangata, Leilani Maraku
Leilani Maraku, founder of Mana o te Tangata Trust, leads Aotearoa's largest peer-led mental health service. She stressed the importance of whānau voices and collaboration in creating lasting community support.
Sir Mark Solomon on Political Climate
Sir Mark Solomon (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Kurī) is a leader in iwi development and health governance. He shared insights on the importance of community-centered decision-making.
Te Ahi Wairua o Kaikōura
Te Ahi Wairua is an integrated whānau collective aimed at increasing whānau centered initiatives and community cohesion through te ao Māori frameworks.
Day 1 Dinner welcome an guitar singing
Dinner welcome & introduction of Charles Hohaia and his korero around the Taihoro Nukurangi name as well as beautiful singing by Ron Baker.
The Story of Rangatiratanga, Eru Kapa Kingi
Eru Kapa-Kingi, a Māori leader and activist, urges institutions to engage in decolonisation. His kōrero emphasized the power of whakapapa, identity, and collective leadership.
Te Kaupapa - National Hauora Coalition
Te Kaupapa is a Māori-led mental health and addiction service delivering whānau-centered care across Tāmaki Makaurau, Counties Manukau, and Waikato.
Te Waka Whaiora
Te Waka Whaiora Trust Kaupapa Māori services is an Indigenous, localised, whānau-centred designed by Māori, with Māori, underpinned by Māori models of practice organisation.
Te Piki Oranga
Te Piki Oranga is a kaupapa Māori health provider delivering whānau-centered care across Te Tauihu o Te Waka-a-Māui. Their team highlighted Te Ao Māori therapies and relationship-based practices to support thriving whānau.
Whakaoranga Whanau Recovery Hub
Whakaoranga Whanau Recovery Hub is a kaupapa Māori alcohol and other drugs (AOD) community support service based in Kaikohe. The hub is committed to supporting whanau suffering the effects of addiction, to transition to a life in recovery.
Setting the scene
Paora shared his passion, the revitalisation of ancestral and cultural pursuits, to naturalise ourselves to the environment and how atua Māori and their characteristics can help us and whānau in this journey.
Lived experiences
The Whakaoranga Whānau Recovery Hub is a peer support-led service based in Kaikohekohe. Tangata Whaiora shared their gifts of recovery and how Māori healing modalities planted seeds of hope and supported their recovery journey.
Wānanga Heals
Te Ahi Wairua o Kaikōura, is a kaupapa Māori, whānau ora based support service based in Kaikoura.