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Te Papamaengenge: Tūwharetoa ki Kawerau Hauora Traditional Healing School

Tracks
Whānau - In-Person Only
Monday, October 21, 2024
12:05 PM - 12:25 PM

Overview

Aroha Ruha-Hiraka, Tuwharetoa ki Kawrau Hauora


Speaker

Agenda Item Image
Aroha Ruha-Hiraka
Health Services Lead Registered Nurse Designated Prescriber
Tuwharetoa ki Kawrau Hauora

Te Papamaengenge: Tūwharetoa ki Kawerau Hauora Traditional Healing School

Abstract

Te Papamaengenge is the foundational concept of Te Kura Maengenge, the traditional healing school of Tūwharetoa ki Kawerau Hauora. Te Papamaengenge was an ancient settlement in the 13th – 14th century within the boundaries of Tūwharetoa ki Kawerau which is captured in local song and history. Chiefly lines, high-ranking people from surrounding tribes who were ill with leprosy went to Te Papamaengenge to care for their wairua, hinengaro and tinana in dignity. It was a place where the local people took care of the unwell. Te Papamaengenge is nestled beneath Maungawhakamana within triangular boundaries, with Maungakōtukutuku a beautiful flowing creek on one side, and Te Haehaenga an ancient pā on the other side. Te Kura Maengenge is dedicated to atua Māori, and the traditions of the tohunga of old. Tohunga will create spaces for tāonga tuku iho to be brought to bear and reconnect with our ancestral knowledge.

Biography

Taurangi te kupu whakaari, he mana tangata, he one matua As a registered nurse prescriber, Aroha Ruha-Hiraka is passionate about Te Ao Māori and applying her knowledge of Te Ao Māori into practice. Te reo me ōna tikanga is the foundation of her nursing practice and forms the basis of her delivery of health services for whānau. In 2017, Aroha graduated from Awanuiārangi kaupapa Māori nursing degree as a registered nurse. The tikanga Māori component of her degree helped her gain the confidence to apply Māori frameworks into practice when working with whānau. Growing up with Te Reo as her first language and through kōhanga reo and kura Kaupapa, Aroha believes health interventions are already within pūrākau and traditional Māori practices. As a new graduate nurse, Aroha was named the 2018 joint winner of the national Young Nurse of the Year Award. The New Zealand Nurses Organisation's annual award celebrates nursing at an excellent level and recognises that recipients have reached a high level in their everyday work. She was nominated by her employer, where she worked as a new graduate, for her competent use of te reo me ōna tikanga in practice. Aroha is studying to become a Nurse Practitioner and plans to continue working amongst her whānau, hapū and iwi in the Eastern Bay of Plenty. Te Kura Maengenge, watch this space.
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