Niuean community pin language hopes on youth
The tight-knit Niuean community in New Zealand is hopeful a resurgence of interest in their language from youth will keep their culture alive.
Transcript
The tight-knit Niuean community in New Zealand is hopeful a resurgence of interest in their language from youth will keep their culture alive.
This week is Niuean language week which has been themed 'Niue People, Niue Families, Use Vagahau Niue' and features church services, book readings, cultural exhibitions and feasts.
Auckland community leader and teacher Nora Douglas told Koro Vaka'uta with a dwindling population on Niue it is even more important for the overseas community to keep speaking Niuean.
NORA DOUGLAS: It means a lot to me because it means that we have the whole week to celebrate and to make alive and to spread the news and to have the whole community of NZ involved in the celebrations of our language.
KORO VAKA'UTA: In terms of young Niueans are you finding that they are still speaking the Niuean language, or that's something that's being worked on?
ND: You can say that in the last few years we even saw a lot of Niueans speaking our own language for lots of reasons of course, but lately, our Niuean young people are really coming out, really hungry for our language and this is a very, very, very emotional time for us because we've been trying to to that for a very long time and to have our young people come on board is really, really exciting. For example we've had out Niuean youth network going at the moment really well and they've been singing songs, recording them, putting them on YouTube and they've been doing lots of other little communications within themselves and in their groups, just to make sure the language is alive out there now.
KV: What do you think has triggered this resurgence in interest, from particularly the young Niueans in New Zealand?
ND: I have a feeling that its always been in their hearts but I think its been really hard to come out but I think as more of us adults are getting into it, encouraging and nurturing, I think that's what's bringing them on board as well and also acknowledging their attempts to use our language and rather than laughing at them kind of thing, and I think that there is a very good positive for our young people to come out and they have actually asked us to be very, very supportive and we have.
KV: How important is it, for a group as, I guess, small but also tight knit as Niueans to be able to maintain the language, how important is it?
ND: This is very, very important. Sure it's only a very small population back on the island where now the language is spoken which means that it's hard to keep it going where there's less people
and there's about 23,000 - 24,000 of us in New Zealand and overseas and we need to have that language maintained otherwise we've lost our culture, we've lost our identity.
KV: So you're optimistic about the future of the Niuean language?
ND: I am now, I feel very, very confident that our language will survive, especially with our young people on board. Before I never heard a lot of people talking the language but now it's coming out everywhere I go, and that is so, so good to hear.
KV: Having these language weeks, that's obviously helped as well?
ND: That is a very, very big help to us, we are so, so grateful for the Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs for their support and for their encouragement and for everything they have given us and they have supported, helped us, to get our languages going and we are very grateful to them.
To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following:
See terms of use.