Kia Ora Incident

The Kia Ora Incident is an incident that took place in 1984, at a time when the use of Māori phrases was uncommon in New Zealand. An Auckland telephone operator, Naida Glavish, was instructed to stop using "kia ora" when greeting callers after the post office had received a complaint. She refused to do so and was consequently demoted, with the whole affair attracting much public interest. She was later given back her original job.[1] The Postmaster-General, Rob Talbot, convinced the Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon, to overturn the prohibition on kia ora.[2]

This event is considered key in the movement to revitalise Te Reo Maori. A similar event took place in 2014 when KiwiYo Whangārei employees were banned from using the term "kia ora".[3][1]

References

  1. Curtis, Makyla (2016). "The Poetics of Bilanguaging: an Unfurling Literacy Ngā Toikupu o Ngā Reo Taharua: e Tākiri ana te Aroā Pānui" (PDF). Ka mate Ka ora: A New Zealand Journal of Poetry and Poetics. 14 (1).
  2. Crean, Mike (22 December 2012). "Rob Talbot dies, top advocate for Sth Canty". The Timaru Herald. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  3. Te Karere TVNZ (21 August 2014), Political backlash over Kia Ora incident, retrieved 13 October 2018


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