Kei roto i taku hinengaro i roto i taku whatumanawa e pēnei ana 'Mā te whaimana rā ānō o te wahine, kātahi anō te iwi Māori ka maranga.' / My mind and my heart go 'It's only when women are recognised will Māori wake up!'– Mira Szászy
Mehemea kei te kī tātou he Māori tātou. Kāore tātou e mōhio ki te reo. Ehara kē tātou i te Māori. / If we say that we're Māori, and if we do not know the language: we're no longer Māori.– James Hēnare
Our elders, who had the stories we wanted, refused to talk on camera . . . We kept getting refusals until we took a punt and took our team and their equipment to Waitangi in February 1987. After a few knockbacks from some of the kaumātua [elders], Sir James Hēnare, the well-respected elder from the north, agreed to talk to us . . . Dame Mira Szaszy, President of the Māori Women's Welfare League, approached us and said, 'If it's good enough for Sir James, I'll talk — if you think I might make a contribution.'– Whai Ngata, on the importance of getting James Hēnare to agree to an interview, in his backgrounder
I was in the back row during that performance … I shot out of the directors seat in the Outside Broadcast van to get backstage and join the group.– Waka Huia director Tainui Stephens on both working on and performing in this episode
Log in
×