Activating traditional sports and te reo Māori through technology

Te Puni Kōkiri will launch the first Māori language Kī-o-Rahi application (app called Puni Reo Kī-o-Rahi).

Published: Friday, 5 October 2018 | Rāmere, 05 Whiringa ā-nuku, 2018

PĀNUI PĀPAHO | MEDIA STATEMENT

Te 4 o Whiringa-ā-nuku 2018 | 4 October 2018

Activating traditional sports and te reo Māori through technology

Te Puni Kōkiri will launch the first Māori language Kī-o-Rahi application (app called Puni Reo Kī-o-Rahi. “This innovative tool is designed to bring a traditional Māori game that has been handed down over the centuries into our digital lives, making using te reo Māori on the sports field easy, fun and accessible,” says Te Puni Kōkiri Senior Advisor Eruera Lee-Morgan.

“Puni Reo is one of the first language platforms to support an indigenous language in the world of sports, and the first to include an indigenous sport like Kī-o-Rahi,” he says.

The Puni Reo Kī-o-Rahi app will be launched at this weekend’s annual Iwi of Origin Tournament in Tāmaki Makaurau. The Iwi of Origin Tournament is the largest iwi sports event of its kind in Aotearoa, attracting more than 2000 contestants across eight different sports codes.

Eruera Lee-Morgan came up with the idea of a Māori language sports app as part of Te Puni Kōkiri’s Auckland Māori Language Plan. He sees the app as a way of increasing the use of te reo Māori in everyday whānau activities.

“This app can help whānau use te reo Māori while participating in traditional and contemporary sports with the support of the latest technology. It activates the use of Māori language in the sports domain where so many of our people participate.”

The app has been designed by He Oranga Poutama and myReo Studios. The team with the support of Te Puni Kōkiri launched a Māori language app for netball, Puni Reo Poitarawhiti at Polyfest 2018 in Auckland.

Eru says, “We have purposefully targeted sports with high whānau involvement. According to statistics there has been a decline in the number of Māori language speakers so tools like this have the potential to help reverse that trend.”

Puni Reo Kī-o-Rahi will be launched on Sunday 7 October at Bruce Pulman Park in Papakura. The app is available for both Android and IOS users.

ENDS

For further information or media comment, contact:

Eruera Lee-Morgan
Senior Advisor

morge@tpk.govt.nz
027 499 5213