AOTEAROA LEARNING PORTAL

Global Parallels · Aotearoa New Zealand

Māori child removal
& Native Schools

A guided journey through Te Tiriti, Native Schools, te reo suppression, child-welfare removals, survivor testimony, and the Māori resistance that kept language, whānau, and identity alive.

Reference infographic for New Zealand Māori child removal and Native Schools
Reference infographic embedded for visual context: colonial systems, key dates, impacts, and renewal.
Native Schools
1867–1969
Te reo decline
90%+ to <5%
Whanaketia
2024
Chapters

Journey complete

Not erased.
Still renewing.

The systems were real. The harm was real. So was the resistance — from whānau memory to survivor testimony, from language petitions to kōhanga reo and kaupapa Māori education.

Key lessons

Assimilation was built. Repair must be built too.

  • Te Tiriti debates are not background; they shape every later claim over authority, care, and language.
  • Native Schools and welfare removals worked differently but shared a colonial logic: remake Māori children away from Māori worlds.
  • Survivor testimony and Māori-led renewal show that history is not only trauma; it is also evidence, resistance, and responsibility.

Kia kaha. Kia māia. Kia manawanui. Be strong. Be brave. Be unwavering.