I absolutely love watching these videos. They are always beautifully edited and presented, and I am so thankful as an American watching them to be allowed to learn more about Maori culture. I truly appreciate the work that Attitude does in making these videos available to everyone around the world! Whakawhetai ki a koe!!
Māori, also known as te reo, is an Eastern Polynesian language spoken by the Māori people, the indigenous population of New Zealand. Closely related to Cook Islands Māori, Tuamotuan, and Tahitian, it gained recognition as one of New Zealand's official languages in 1987.
it warms my heart seeing the love and care that has been shown to our kaumātua. This has stressed the importance of integrating Māori tikanga and values in all sectors across Aotearoa.
Great video that shows this American woman another type of living well in other countries. I'm embarrassed that I have always pronounced Maori as "may oh ree" instead of the real way to pronounce it as you've shown in this video. From across the big pond, my thanks to all in this great video.
People and families are the same all over the world. Different cultures, life roads, make us who we are and determines what we pass on. My mom died and my dad spent his final years at my house. I agree with the daughter in this video, we belonged to her (him) and now she (he) belongs to us.
In the rehab center I used to volunteer at with my children the memory care patients, grandma's and grandpa's as we called them, would cook old school meals every Friday and sing songs from their childhood/teen years every day. It really stimulated them and I could see them 'wake up' right before my eyes, it was amazing.
Whānau (Māori pronunciation: [ˈfaːnaʉ]) is a Māori-language word for extended family, now increasingly entering New Zealand English, particularly in official publications.
Are the words used at the two minute mark commonly used in New Zealand English, because I had to look all of them up to understand any of the sentence.
hiya, yup - Maori is taught in schools (though to varying degrees) I can say that I understood a fair bit of the maori, especially the waiata (songs) :D (I'm a non-Maori New Zealander btw)
Whakapapa is the core of traditional mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge).Whakapapa means genealogy. Other Māori terms for genealogy are kāwai and tātai. Kauwhau and taki refer to the process of tracing genealogies.
I absolutely love watching these videos. They are always beautifully edited and presented, and I am so thankful as an American watching them to be allowed to learn more about Maori culture. I truly appreciate the work that Attitude does in making these videos available to everyone around the world! Whakawhetai ki a koe!!
Māori, also known as te reo, is an Eastern Polynesian language spoken by the Māori people, the indigenous population of New Zealand. Closely related to Cook Islands Māori, Tuamotuan, and Tahitian, it gained recognition as one of New Zealand's official languages in 1987.
it warms my heart seeing the love and care that has been shown to our kaumātua. This has stressed the importance of integrating Māori tikanga and values in all sectors across Aotearoa.
Great video that shows this American woman another type of living well in other countries. I'm embarrassed that I have always pronounced Maori as "may oh ree" instead of the real way to pronounce it as you've shown in this video. From across the big pond, my thanks to all in this great video.
People and families are the same all over the world. Different cultures, life roads, make us who we are and determines what we pass on. My mom died and my dad spent his final years at my house. I agree with the daughter in this video, we belonged to her (him) and now she (he) belongs to us.
Mariah You remind me of my mom :( I miss her so much.
I have enjoyed every single program binged watched all weekend thank you all peoples involved in putting these together.
In the rehab center I used to volunteer at with my children the memory care patients, grandma's and grandpa's as we called them, would cook old school meals every Friday and sing songs from their childhood/teen years every day. It really stimulated them and I could see them 'wake up' right before my eyes, it was amazing.
Mrs. Garcia same here 🥰
Dementia is so tough, press on and love them when you can until the end is all you can do. Strength by relaxing into it, acceptance. So hard.
what a beautiful community
I love watching these type of videos
Wonderful, thank for this.
Pacific island people on personal level..hushed about dementia disease. This video draws attention these people are supported. Not hide!
This is very interesting, the anthropologist in me was fascinated at creating a testing tool based on the culture of the person being studied.
wonderful 💜💪🏻
I love watching these videos
Whānau (Māori pronunciation: [ˈfaːnaʉ]) is a Māori-language word for extended family, now increasingly entering New Zealand English, particularly in official publications.
Mrs. Garcia some PhD’s in full Reo now :-) 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Are the words used at the two minute mark commonly used in New Zealand English, because I had to look all of them up to understand any of the sentence.
It's like she switched languages, that was wild
Éamonn Ó Floinn it’s Maori. It’s the language of the indigenous people of New Zealand
bron1steve Yes, I know. What I was asking was whether non-Maori New Zealanders would understand them.
hiya, yup - Maori is taught in schools (though to varying degrees) I can say that I understood a fair bit of the maori, especially the waiata (songs) :D (I'm a non-Maori New Zealander btw)
@@EamonnFlynn Tá sé cosúil le Éireannaigh a bheith ag úsáid an "Béarlige" - focail Béarla/Gaeilge le chéile san abairt céanna
Arohanui Makarena, Piripi, Oliver, Hohepa ❤️
She good mum
Definition of waiata. : a Maori song usually commemorative of some important event
Mrs. Garcia can sing waiata any time :-) to uplift ones spirit, to celebrate, to pray, to show respect, or for enjoyment ;)
Whakapapa is the core of traditional mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge).Whakapapa means genealogy. Other Māori terms for genealogy are kāwai and tātai. Kauwhau and taki refer to the process of tracing genealogies.
She Looks good at age 83...
The presenter is pronouncing Maraia's name wrong.
❤
I thought this was about Molly and Joey
Te ako ako ahua ako dementia te o maori 😊
Ka aroha hoki
Terri M, I am also named Terry M, though I am an American. Hands across the water to wave hello!
Hm Hearing is handy.
What is maori? a special form of dementia?
...Māori are people. It's an ethnicity. They are indigenous Polynesians.
@@dibti0 thanks! Good to know
They are the indigenous Polynesians of New Zealand.
Becca Turcotte don’t take this the wrong way .... you put a smile on my dial made my 😊 thank you