A classroom of students at Ōmokoroa Point SchooI is campaigning to get the area of the place they live spelt correctly with a macron above the first letter of Ōmokoroa.
Room 10 at OPS stumbled upon the incorrect spelling when writing ‘thank you' letters and has turned to campaigning for Ōmokoroa to be spelt correctly – with a macron – by their community.
'We found this issue at the start of Term 2… now we're trying to make all signs around our community change to have a macron over the first O in Omokoroa,” says Room 10 student Leila Cook.
'Most places we've looked at don't have the macron,” says fellow classmate George Palade.
'If we don't put the macron on Ōmokoroa it could change the entire meaning of the place and it could be offensive! If this issue remains unchecked for too long future generations could forget the macron and the entire Ōmokoroa would have changed forever!”
Significant
Teacher Deirdre Duggan approached Maori language specialist, Whaea Terania Ormsby-Teki at Maungatapu School, who says all places in New Zealand with a capital O with a macron have significant meaning.
'Either somebody lived there that was significant; or something like a war, death or event, happened there that was significant,” says Deirdre.
Room 10 student Maia Groucott says many words in te reo Maori have macrons because they mean different things without one.
'Wētā with a macron means ‘insect'; without the macron weta means ‘poo'. Keke means ‘cake'; if you add a macron to the last ‘e' then kekē means ‘armpit'.”
The class contacted the Pirirakau hapū, with Koro Nicolas responding.
'We've had a korero with some of our people from Pirirakau and we're still working on our narrative for Ōmokoroa.
'In time we'll put together resources to help with understanding the rohe but for now what we've seen on the Facebook page [the students' campaign] is great!
'All names have whakapapa and the whakapapa should be respected. Names of places, people and events are never given frivolously.”
History lost
Deirdre says many stories exist of where the name ‘Ōmokoroa' came from.
'Some say we're named after a lizard, some say a huhu grub – the actual history of where the name came from has been lost over time. Regardless, to pronounce the name correctly – it needs a macron.”
The class has also contacted Western Bay of Plenty District Council to request it change street signs to include a macron. The class has been invited to present their project to the council on July 26.
Asked why the project is so important, Willow Grant responded: 'Because people don't pronounce it right and it is respectful to pronounce it right and spell it right.”
Anna says her school's 2022 focus is ‘kia tika', which means doing the right thing – 'that's why we think this is important”.
Sune` Steenberg, who has a mark above her first name to pronounce a short vowel, says if Ōmokoroa doesn't have macron it might be rude – 'like if people spelt my name without a mark above it”.
George also wants to inspire other schools 'to do the right thing if they have problem with their name”.
Principal Sandra Portegys says OPS has used a macron for Ōmokoroa in the last few years.
'We've added a macron to website, Facebook page, newsletter – but we still have some signage to change in our school as well.”
5 comments
Trash!
Posted on 08-07-2022 14:48 | By The Professor
What complete trash. I think Omokoroa will not fall off the map just because a small line is missing from above the 'O'. I think there are more pressing matters in Omokoroa and the wider area......like sorting out the roads and other infrastructure.
Seriously?
Posted on 09-07-2022 08:06 | By Mein Fuhrer
“If we don’t put the macron on Ōmokoroa it could change the entire meaning of the place and it could be offensive!" Hey we go again, the great crime of "offending". That's what happens when the over-emotional special interest groups and "communities" get to have a "voice". Beam me up Scotty!
Given that...
Posted on 09-07-2022 13:04 | By morepork
...Maori was never a written language and still would not be if Europeans had not introduced the Latin alphabet, I can't see Kaumatua being offended if a macron is missed. Variations in regional Maori accent and pronunciation are widespread, and if using macrons helps to resolve this, then let's use them. But I can't see the omission of macrons being an offensive big deal. This smacks more of academic pedantry than the actual use of Te Reo. These kids are being wound up. The important thing is to get the language spoken; worry about writing it later. Road signs should be amended when they are renewed and, as people see the macron being used, they will learn the use of it by osmosis.
REALLY?
Posted on 12-07-2022 09:38 | By Yadick
How is this giving our kids a solid educational foundation. How is this sort of crap going to sustain their working futures. Dash it, this is absolutely pathetic. Our kids need a proper education.
Pronunciation
Posted on 14-07-2022 16:23 | By Ceem
I'm not aware that the addition of the macron over the capital "O" is going to make the slightest difference to the pronunciation of the name of our beloved village. I wonder if the pupils of Room 10 Omokoroa Point School really "stumbled" on the missing macron and whether it dawned on them the addition of a macron to towns commencing with "O" will cost money to change road signs, headed note papers, atlases etc etc. An interesting investigative exercise pupils, now get back to the more important subjects for your futures.
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