
On The Up: Northland Māori trust revitalises land, wins national award
Whangaroa Ngaiotonga Trust - represented by trustees Carla Martin and Morris Pita, farm worker Kieran Wetere-Hepi, farm manager Matt Payne and administrator Tori Norman - is achieving great things on its Whangaruru block.
The success of Northland farming operation Whangaroa Ngaiotonga Trust is about so much more than being profitable, it is also about empowering the thousands of descendants of whānau who used to live on the whenua.
The trust, which manages a 1100ha block in Ngaiotonga, Whangaruru, has won the national Māori

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Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
‘No place' for racism, Bluff Rugby Club says
Bluff rugby team. PHOTO: ODT FILES Bluff Rugby Club has broken its silence, saying it wants Tokanui club supporters held accountable for racist comments made at a match between the teams earlier this month. In an official statement released yesterday, the club said racial slurs toward the team had not been addressed in any of the discussions after Rugby Southland Referees refused to provide officials for its game last weekend. The club admitted a supporter came on to the field twice to remonstrate with the referee but he was quickly ushered away by the team. The club said players of the predominantly Māori and Pacific Island Bluff team were frequently targets of derogatory remarks attacking their identity and culture. "We will not tolerate racism or discrimination. There is no place for it in our club, or in rugby as a whole." During the June 7 game, a Bluff club supporter was removed from the field after directing offensive language at the referee. The same person resumed their verbal tirade after the final whistle. "On both occasions, our team captain and senior player intervened immediately and the individual left without resistance. We are proud of how our players responded in the moment." The game between Bluff and Tokanui was the third Southland game in three weeks to experience referee-related issues, the statement said. "We are concerned about how this incident has been portrayed. The narrative that has emerged has led to public backlash and reputational harm, despite our efforts to address the matter appropriately at the time and engage constructively since." The statement said none of the club's players were involved yet they were unfortunately made an example of. "This decision opened the door to harmful and unfounded commentary, based more on assumption than fact. We are disappointed by how quickly a narrative took hold, one that does not reflect the actions or values of our club. This has highlighted deeper assumptions some may hold about our team and community, and we believe it's important to question and reflect on those. "We are also deeply concerned that racist comments made by some opposition supporters and players during the match have gone unaddressed. "While not the initial cause of conflict, these remarks contributed to the atmosphere of tension and hurt." The statement said the Bluff club remained committed to working with Rugby Southland and the referees' association. "Our players and club members, like our referees, are people too and their wellbeing is ours to protect. We hope the wider rugby community can move forward with ... respect, accountability, and unity." The club had stayed silent to let the truth come out but the false narrative now circulating had gone too far, it said. "We ask for fairness and understanding." The club's matches were recorded from kickoff to post-match handshakes, and anyone with concerns could view the footage. The Otago Daily Times has not been able to contact a Tokanui Rugby Club representative or Rugby Southland chief executive Hua Tamariki for their response to the Bluff club statement. Rugby Southland Referees chairman Andrew Rowland told the Otago Daily Times earlier this week regular spectator and coach misconduct reports were filed from all grades of the sport. "We deal with this every week. There probably aren't too many things that we haven't heard spoken to us over the years." Players' family members "are hearing people on the sideline calling them all sorts of names". A culture change was needed because the sport was being affected, Mr Rowland said.


Scoop
4 days ago
- Scoop
Te Aroha Softball Club Receives Matariki Award
Thursday, 19 June 2025, 12:37 pm Press Release: New Zealand Amateur Sport Association 19 June 2025 The New Zealand Amateur Sport Association Inc. is pleased to announce that the 2025 Te Tohu Tiketike o Matariki award has been made to the Te Aroha Softball Club, Waiwhetū, Hutt City. The award was announced today by Association Patron, Andy Leslie, ONZM who convened the award selection panel. The award, decided in collaboration with Te Upoko o te Ika, Aotearoa's first te reo Māori radio station, acknowledges a community sport organisation which has embraced te reo Māori as part of its kaupapa. The award also acknowledges National Volunteer Week (Te Wiki Tūao ā-Motu), with the recipient reliant on volunteers to deliver sport to its local community. Andy Leslie (a member of the New Zealand Softball Team at the World Championships in Mexico City in 1966) said that 'softball as a sport is a wonderful way for communities to come together, in an inclusive, fun environment. The Te Aroha Softball Club has extended that environment to integrate te ao Māori into the game, acknowledging the whakapapa of the local area and its sporting community.' Association Chairman Gordon Noble-Campbell said that 'as a club with a history that goes back over 80 years, Te Aroha Softball Club's strength and longevity can be traced back (along with many other Te Aroha sporting codes and affiliates), to Te Aroha Hutt Valley Māori Association, which originally focused on bringing together Māori who had moved to the Wellington region.' Through the values of whanaungatanga and kaitiakitanga, (which are the foundation of Arohanui ki te Tangata) and the building of Waiwhetū Marae, many sporting codes became affiliated to Te Aroha Hutt Valley Māori Association. Today, the Association continues to be active in supporting Te Aroha Softball Club, and it's junior and senior teams which have achieved success at local, national and international levels. Adrian Tangaroa Wagner, General Manager of Te Upoko o te Ika said that 'community sport is an important way for te reo Māori to become more familiar to a larger number of people, with this year's award again acknowledging how this can become an integral part of our overall approach to building healthy communities through sport'. Previous awards have been made to: in 2022, the Otaki Surf Lifesaving Club Inc. (Horowhenua Kapiti), in 2023, the YMP Hockey Club (Poverty Bay), and in 2024, the Papuni Otautahi Boxing Trust, (Canterbury). © Scoop Media


Scoop
13-06-2025
- Scoop
From Taupō To Tennessee: Bell's Ascent To Football's Global Stage
As Auckland City prepare to face German giants Bayern Munich at the FIFA Club World Cup, one player's journey to the world stage speaks to a deeper truth of quiet determination, ancestral pride, and the weight of dreams carried on humble shoulders. At just 21, defender Adam Bell is poised to confront some of the finest footballers on the planet. Serge Gnabry. Jamal Musiala. Names that belong in the rarefied air of European elite. Yet Bell's immediate reality lies not in celebrity, but in sacrifice. Just two days after taking the field against Bayern, he will sit a university business exam in a Tennessee hotel room—wedged between match analysis and recovery protocols. Bell's road to this moment did not begin in a Bundesliga academy or a European youth system. It began in a car, on Auckland's suburban streets, driven by his mother Heidi, a primary school teacher at Wesley Primary, who used her limited annual leave to attend her son's biggest match to date. 'No one in my family really played football,' Bell reflects. 'My brothers hated it. But I stuck with it. Mum backed me the whole way.' He has already exhausted the last of his three paid leave days from Bunnings, used during the Oceania Champions League. Every step since, travel, training, match day, is unpaid. His university studies in commerce are on hold. There is no lucrative contract waiting on the other side of the tunnel. But the chance to represent Aotearoa on football's biggest stage, he says, is 'worth every moment.' Bell hails from Ngāti Tūwharetoa, whose ancestral lands stretch across the central plateau of the North Island, encompassing Mount Tongariro and Lake Taupō. His whakapapa runs deep into these lands, and deeper still into the values they represent. 'It's a privilege to be here as a Māori football player,' he says. 'I know my ancestors would be proud.' His father, Philip Bell, better known to many in New Zealand as DJ Sir-Vere, is a pioneer of Aotearoa's hip hop scene. From Rip It Up magazine to MTV's Wrekognise, from the Aotearoa Hip Hop Summit to the Major Flavours compilations, Sir-Vere helped build the cultural scaffolding that shaped a generation. For his services to music and broadcasting, he received a Queen's Service son's honour may not come gilded in the same way, but it carries no less meaning. 'My mum and dad always told me that whatever you do in life, don't go in half-hearted. Give it everything.' Bell's early football memories are stitched into the grounds of Mount Roskill Intermediate, where he first played competitively. That same school is now part of Auckland City FC's social responsibility programme, home to coaching clinics and a project to build an all-weather pitch and floodlights. The school recently bestowed two sacred taonga to the club to express its aroha and support for City in America. Bell has been entrusted with keeping one of the taonga during the trip, the other is with skipper Mario Ilich. It is a full-circle moment not lost on the young full back. 'To know the club has formed a close relationship with Mount Roskill Intermediate School means a lot,' he says. 'It's where I started my journey and now we're giving something back in terms of coaching and infrastructure.' From those modest beginnings to this unlikely clash with Bayern Munich, Bell has walked a path marked not by glamour but by resilience. In New Zealand, he explains, Auckland City FC are more often the aggressors, pressing and dominating possession. Here, they must adapt, absorb pressure, and survive. 'Oddly, it suits us,' he says. 'Our objective is to ensure that we follow the game plan set out by the coaches and see where it takes us." Bell is under no illusions about the challenge ahead. 'This is a David versus Goliath moment,' he says. 'But once we get out onto the pitch you have to try and live in the moment to an extent." He has drawn confidence from recent performances, particularly in strong showings in friendly games with Al Ain FC (0-1) and Philadelphia Union II (2-0), where he played well. 'Those moments help,' he says. 'They remind you the other teams, while special, are human beings, too.' His admiration for Bayern's stars, Musiala, Olise, Gnabry, is tempered by perspective. 'I've looked up to them. But now it's about stepping onto the same field and backing yourself.' Bell will not define success by the scoreline alone. For him, the journey to this match is as meaningful as the match itself. Behind every run, every pass, every call to his team-mates lies a broader story, of whakapapa and sacrifice, of a mother's support and a father's legacy, of Māori identity carried into global arenas. 'Every kid dreams of playing teams like this,' he says. 'I'm lucky enough to live it.'