NZ daycare shortens Māori child’s name, declaring it ‘too hard’ to pronounce


A New Zealand mother has shared her anger at being told her daughter’s name was being shortened at daycare because it was “too hard” to pronounce.

Five-year-old Mahinarangi Tautu had just started at daycare when her mum Paris was informed staff would be using “Rangi” to refer to her daughter.

But the Ngāti Raukawa woman said she “will not let this happen” as it doesn’t respect and honour her daughter’s Māori heritage.

“I am sad that in 2021, in Aotearoa, a 5-year-old girl has lost the pride that comes with her beautiful name,” Ms Tautu wrote in a Facebook post, The NZ Heraldreports.

Ms Tautu explained Mahinarangi’s name is often mispronounced and mocked by her peers, leaving the young girl “embarrassed” and lacking the confidence to correct anyone.

“Can you imagine your child being too embarrassed to say their name because people won’t make a decent effort to pronounce it properly?” she said.

“It made me so angry, especially because they’d use te ao Māori resources in her classes.”

“I am sad that in 2021, in Aotearoa, a 5-year-old girl has lost the pride that comes with her beautiful name,” Ms Tautu wrote in a Facebook post, The NZ Herald reports.

Ms Tautu explained Mahinarangi’s name is often mispronounced and mocked by her peers, leaving the young girl “embarrassed” and lacking the confidence to correct anyone.

“Can you imagine your child being too embarrassed to say their name because people won’t make a decent effort to pronounce it properly?” she said.

“It made me so angry, especially because they’d use te ao Māori resources in her classes.”

The outraged mother has since spoken out, saying her ancestors had experienced something similar, making her even more determined to not let the same thing happen to her daughter.

“My ancestors changed their original name from Perepe-Perana to Phillips because of colonisation,” Tautu told the NZ Herald. “I will not let something similar happen with my daughter.”

Mahinarangi’s name translates to “moon in the sky”, with Ms Tautu explaining that shortening it takes away its “mana” – a traditional Māori belief of an inherited spiritual power.

The name has been passed down through her ancestors and has a deep line of descent, known as whakapapa, which often indicates where someone is from.

Not giving someone the mana their name deserves takes away the significance of its meaning and can be seen as a lack of respect.

“It’s important for our kids to be confident in their names, regardless of their ethnicity,” Ms Tautu said.

“Our language isn’t complicated, pronouncing a name properly is massive to us.

“Your name is your identity. Your parents give you your name for a reason.”

Social media has erupted in support for the family, with people slamming the daycare for being “disrespectful” and “lazy”.

“Too lazy to pronounce … my kid’s school refuse to pronounce their Maori properly too, done on purpose every time, I cringe because it is sooo disrespectful,” one wrote on Facebook.

“Good on this mum for taking a stand,” another said.

“That teacher needs to step up and learn just as her students are expected to do, lead by example,” someone else added.

While one wrote: “This is wrong. the teacher needs to wake up.”
 
Still not as hilarious as the Chinese who decide on a completely unrelated white name.

But in all seriousness, all cultures have hard to pronounce names. Teachers will either learn it or call you by a shortened version. This shitshow could have been avoided with a private conference.
Gonna disagree here, word you're looking for is "Christian".
It's also the foreigner's duty to assimilate if we must have a multiracial society. I'm not going to bother with pronouncing all the Xings and Xiangs even though I can accurately.
 
Anglos seem to be particularly bad at foreign names. Maybe that's why they have their own special names for every city and so on.
 
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Not even from New Zealand and it doesn't seem like a hard name to pronounce, unless they expect you to use a rolling 'r' or something.

Did they try asking the child what kind of nickname they wanted to go by?
 
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This class of Kindergarteners is the most hardcore 1488 group of 5 year old racists Xir has ever seen!
How dare they mispronounce my daughter Taoratauritutanuakinikahahapa's noble Maori name, don't they know they're literally committing ethnocide?
I'm shaking right now!

Fucking assimilate and stay assimilated, you dumb bitch. The Irish used to be the white niggers of America and the Italians lived in ghettos run by criminal gangs, now they're privileged whites just like the rest of us. They got where they are today by throwing away the parts of their culture that got in the way of success in their new home, keeping only the harmless and marketable quirks like pizza, leprechauns, and alcoholism. Giving their children names pronounceable by the majority was a critical part of that process, yet an incredibly easy one. You won't even do that much.
Irish names are some of the most unpronounceable on the planet, only beaten by those Bush nigger languages that are just pops and clicks.
The Irish simply refuse to use the sounds that go with letters, instead giving random noises to already established letters of the alphabet
Saoirse, which looks like "sow ears" is a good example, or the Stinkditch boards Shbdhbh which lacks the vowels to even make a recognizable word.
 
Irish names are some of the most unpronounceable on the planet, only beaten by those Bush nigger languages that are just pops and clicks.
The Irish simply refuse to use the sounds that go with letters, instead giving random noises to already established letters of the alphabet
Saoirse, which looks like "sow ears" is a good example, or the Stinkditch boards Shbdhbh which lacks the vowels to even make a recognizable word.
Hell, I'm 3/4 Irish-American and I don't know how the fuck to say "Siobhan."
 
I'm gonna go against the grain on just one single point here, and that's on the people complaining she's too white. Maori consider anyone with Maori ancestry to be Maori regardless of how far back it is. Never mind the one drop rule, it can be a tenth of a drop for all they care. Skin color doesn't matter. It's kinda wholesome, really.
 
So I am a run of the mill white girl. My parents gave me an 'exotic' name. The pain the name gave me through school really really sucked. No one remembered it, teachers mispronounced on role call, etc. Kids need to be seen and acknowledged. What happened was people wouldnt use my name. I became 'hey you' or ignored because people didnt want to admit they didnt know my name. I became invisible and as a small child that can really mess with your psyche. It wasn't til highschool when I switched schools did I give myself a simple nickname that solved all my name problems and people started addressing me by name. And when people ask what the nickname was short for, my exotic name got all kinds of ooooo's and ahhhh's that made it special rather than a stumbling block. In an ideal world everyone would respect each other and take time to learn each person's name and heritage....but theworld isnt ideal and you gotta prepare your kid for that. The girl's nickname in the article is still ovbiously 'not white' and unique, it isnt like the school decided to call her Annie or Emily instead of a shorthand of her real name. Poor kid
 
Shervonne.
That's exactly what I was talking about lol.
Letters in the Roman Alphabet already have specific sounds attached to them, but that's not good enough for the Irish lol, they give letters sounds that don't even go with them, and craziest of all there are letters that actually have those sounds already so it's not like they're weird noises like the Click/Pop languages that you need to improvise for.
I'm convinced they do it just because they're stubborn and want to get one over on the Eternal Anglo by making their names unpronounceable...
 
Sounds like people were making fun of the girl for her name and the teacher wanted to fix that. The proper way of handling it is to tell the parent what's going on and have the parent tell the girl the cultural importance of her name. But no, parent has to get society to be the bully and raise her kid.

Also, I'm pretty sick of the "if you can't pronounce muh name than you be rayciss" shit everywhere since go tell that to basically every non-Anglo white person whose ancestors immigrated to an Anglo country like New Zealand. No one ever complains when some wop or Polack gets their name butchered by an Anglo.

Let me guess, it's the gibs isn't it, just like all the blue eyed Abos in Australia and blond haired Injuns in the US/Canada.

No one can pronounce or spell my name properly and it's not even that hard. My mom's maiden name was some Ukrainian letter nightmare no one can pronounce or spell. My grandfather's name was Americanized because ain't no one pronouncing that. But we white so no one care. It's rather crazy how that works isn't it? I've learned to let people call me by whatever they think is my name because it's way easier than correcting everyone multiple times a day.

The child was being bullied for having that nightmare of a name. Since mom is named Paris and looks spicy white I have to wonder if her parents weren't very connected to the culture and zoomer Paris got really into it online as a way to "muh identity". She's a thot with drawn on eyebrows. And sadly the poor child has inherited her five head. Hopefully she'll grow into it. And by the time she's a teen drawing on eyebrows will be out of style. It looks stupid as fuck. Just throw on some white makeup and you're already for a Juggalo Gathering. Paris looks like she's halfway to being Down With The Clown but got interrupted by the virtue signaling bell.
 
I know I'm going against the grain here, but if you can't pronounce that name you might be functionally retarded. I've worked with Maoris with far longer names than that, and never had a problem.
Also, "Rangi" is a male nickname in Maori.
Going to the media is fucking absurd though. You're just putting a target on your child's back.

It doesn't look that hard to me either. But five year olds are a different story.

She's Streisand Effecting her child when a simple chat with the teacher would have been a better way to handle this. But what can you expect when mom is obviously raised on social media. Everything gets overshared because it's been normalized to do so.
 
Both sides are retarded. Mahinarangi is pretty much pronounced the way it looks, although the Rangi is pronounced using the a sound from the word “are”, but that’s the only hard part. Mother should’ve spent a bit more time trying to work it out with the daycare though.

However, it’s also worth noting the mum didn’t actually go to the media, she just complained about it on Facebook, and then it got signal boosted by retards until a local newspaper decided to run it as a filler story. See
I am sad that in 2021, in Aotearoa, a 5-year-old girl has lost the pride that comes with her beautiful name,” Ms Tautu wrote in a Facebook post, The NZ Herald reports
 
However, it’s also worth noting the mum didn’t actually go to the media, she just complained about it on Facebook, and then it got signal boosted by retards until a local newspaper decided to run it as a filler story. See
Oh hey another thing that would have been an absolutely nothing and forgotten as if it never happen if it wasnt for fucking social media.

also lol @ the nearly 2 year old bump
 
This seems like the kind of thing that would have been dealt with better through a parent/teacher meeting. Also ask the daughter about how she feels about it.

I don't think anyone should *have* to anglicize their name, but you kind of have to be realistic about the fact that it's going to be a lifelong issue that people mispronounce it if they're not familiar with the language. That's part of living in a multicultural society. I have a Polish name in the U.S. so I'm well acquainted with this subject.

The fact that she went to the media with it rather than a private chat with the school makes it seem like it's more about virtue signalling and attention than actually making her daughter comfortable with the situation.

What to do with your hard to pronounce ethnic name can be a tricky subject for a person as they grow up, I feel bad for her that her mom is treating it like this already.
 
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