On Waitangi Day from 8am to midday, Kim Hill and PaulDiamond (Curator, Maori, at the Turnbull Library) will host local guests atPuke Ariki in New Plymouth.
Members of the Taranaki public are invited to be part ofthe audience for the live broadcast, and for the recording of the Korerorero onSunday at Puke Ariki (see below).
Entry is free, but seating is limited.
Waitangi Day morning
8:10-9:00: Panel discussion with Keri Opai, Kura Denness,and Margaret Smith (This will be recorded on Sunday 5 February at Puke Ariki,between 1.30pm and 2.30pm)
9:05-10:00 Guests will include Tokatumoana Kevin Walden,Derina Turner, and Rachel Stewart
10:05-11:00 Guests will include Glen Bennett and Wayne'Arch' Arthur
11:05-12:00 Guests will include Colleen Tuuta, JuneMoseley, and Michael Lawley
Producer: Sean McKenna
Producer: Mark Cubey
New Plymouth engineers: Kevin Golding, Steve BurridgeWellington engineer: Tony Schwartz Waitangi engineer: Darryl Stack
Guest information and links:
Keri Opai is a kaiako and has taught te reo Maori foralmost 30 years. He has been a lecturer, grammarian, interpreter, academic andlocal iwi radio presenter.
Kura Denness is a director of Te Atiawa Holdings, TeAtiawa Settlements Trust and PHARMAC and is on the Council of MasseyUniversity. She serves on the board of Taranaki District Health Board and TuiOra Ltd, is a trustee with the Midlands Regional Health Network Trust and is onthe committee of the local Institute of Directors in Taranaki.
Margaret Smith is a Treaty educator who has been runningworkshops for 17 years relating to the Treaty of Waitangi and cultural issuessurrounding this. She also works as a counsellor at the Western Institute ofTechnology at Taranaki.
Tokatumoana Kevin Walden is chairperson of Taranaki iwi,director of Parininihi ki Waitotara Incorporation (PKW) and a local rugbycoach. He was formerly regional director with Te Puni Kokiri (Ministry of MaoriDevelopment), a team leader with Child, Youth and Family and a strategicplanner and advisor with the Department of Conservation relating to Treatysettlements.
Dee Turner of Korito Education teaches organichorticulture classes and runs workshops on her property situated at the base ofMount Taranaki. She is also the Organic Farm NZ Taranaki Certification Manager.She will be building a solar oven during the programme.
Rachel Stewart is a columnist for the Taranaki Daily Newsand the Waikato Daily Times, an avid falconer and formerfarmer-turned-environmentalist, plus she was the first female train driver inNew Zealand.
Glen Bennett is a New Plymouth community worker whoprovides a home for troubled teenage boys. Glen is also involved with runningyouth and cultural events, has his own mobile coffee business and is amusician.
Wayne 'Arch' Arthur is one of New Plymouth’s originalsurfers who has been involved with surfing for 50 years. He’s also a surf shopowner and local surf radio show host.
Colleen Tuuta is a self-employed businesswoman and localcommunity leader, with tribal affiliations to Taranaki, Ngati Mutunga, TeAtiawa, Ngati Maniapoto and Ngati Mahuta iwi.
June Moseley is a former teacher at Spotswood College,who runs the local Taranaki Welsh group.
Michael Lawley is a mechanical engineer and director ofEcoInnovation, a local Taranaki business specialising in renewable energysolutions.
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