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.”
 
The fuck is this shit? When I was in kindergarten the school gave me the wrong last name until I corrected the teacher on my goddamn own the first day of class. Whiny little bitch.
My name is impossible to spell correctly on the first try, it isn't that long, it just flies a little bit in the face of a similar and conventional name it isn't related to at all. In school I would always just spell my name whenever somebody I've never met was about to write it down because I know that they'll fuck it up.

The kid will eventually find a way to quickly teach others who to spell and pronounce it quickly. Mom here shouldn't worry and give her kid more credit.
 
My name is impossible to spell correctly on the first try, it isn't that long, it just flies a little bit in the face of a similar and conventional name it isn't related to at all. In school I would always just spell my name whenever somebody I've never met was about to write it down because I know that they'll fuck it up.

The kid will eventually find a way to quickly teach others who to spell and pronounce it quickly. Mom here shouldn't worry and give her kid more credit.
Having a what a llinski for last name has gotten me out of lawsuits
 
i think someone needs to tell mom that a lot of us get our names shortened or completely fucked up all the time--i guess someone named paris can't really relate. her kiddo's going to go through school waiting for that long pause during roll call so she can tell her teacher how to pronounce her name, but she'll be fine. she'll probably grow up wanting/liking a nickname anyway.

teach baby girl to stick up for herself if she's getting made fun of, and stop acting like they decided to call her "becky" instead.
 
Seeing how someone reacts to being given a crude nickname is one of the best ways of finding out whether they're cool or not. Most of the time people are only given nicknames if people like them. If they throw a hissy fit over a nickname they're probably best avoided. If nobody wants to interact with you that's way worse than having a goofy nickname.

At one of my old jobs they took to calling me by the name of an infamous spree killer with a really distinct name. Not like "Bundy" or "Zodiac " or something, think more along the lines of "Lanza". Whatever, I didn't care. Made the mistake of telling my friends about it and they started using it as well. Then this new guy started at work and I gave him a really benign nickname, it wasn't even mean. Like if his name was Johnny and I called him Sonny. But he freaked the fuck out about it, bitched and moaned until my boss asked me to be more considerate of his feelings. What a cunt.

Anyway, I feel sorry for this girl. With a mom like that, the outlook's not so good.
 
If a name is too hard to pronounce, its too hard to pronounce. Having teachers take time out of the class to try to say your name correctly is just awkward for everyone. Some people have heavy accents, getting everyone to pronounce shit the way you prefer is simply impossible.
As long as what they call you is good enough that people recognize that name as yours and they're not insulting you, then what's the problem?
 
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.
 
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.
 
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