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Event 73

How to be a Good Ancestor

Ko te tūāpapa o tēnei pae, ko mātāpono taketake o te whai whakaaro ki ngā reanga e whitu kei mua i te aroaro, ā, ka kotahi mai ki tēnei pae ngā mātānga ka hōpara i He Whakaputanga me TeTiriti i te pōtitanga e kainamu mai ana i tēnei whenua.

Ka tūtaki a Gabriella Brayne (nō Ngāti Maniapoto, he Falefa, he Pākehā) ki te kiritohe, ki te kaituhi o Mana, ki a Tāme Iti (nō Ngāi Tūhoe), ki te mātanga pūmātauranga, ki te kaituhi o The State of Māori Rights, ki a Professor Margaret Mutu (nō Ngāti Kahu, nō Te Rarawa, nō Ngāti Whātua), me te Ahorangi o ngā Tōrangapū, me te kaituhi o The Good Settler, me Richard Shaw (he Pākehā) i a rātou e huritao ana ki tō tātou ahunga, ki te tāraitanga me te werohanga o ngā mana whakahaere, me ngā ara e tūmanako tonu ai te tangata i ēnei wā e nui nei ngā wero o te wā.

He aha ngā kōwhiringa o ēnei rā ka tārai i te ao o ngā uri whakaheke?

He Wāhanga nō tā Shilo Kino Noho hei Kairauhī Manuhiri.

Grounded in the Indigenous principle of thinking seven generations ahead, this panel brings together expert voices to explore He Whakaputanga and Te Tiriti as the country approaches an election.

Gabriella Brayne (Ngāti Maniapoto, Falefa, Pākehā) meets renowned activist and author of Mana Tāme Iti (Ngāi Tūhoe), scholar and author of The State of Māori Rights Professor Margaret Mutu (Ngāti Kahu, Te Rarawa, Ngāti Whātua) and Professor of politics and author of The Good Settler Richard Shaw (Pākehā) as they reflect on where we are heading, how power is shaped and contested, and what it takes to hold onto hope in challenging times.

What choices are we making today that will shape the lives of those who will come after us?

Part of Shilo Kino’s Guest Curatorship.

This session will be held in English.

Sat, 16 May 2026

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