E Tū Whānau’s violence free and whānau-centred kaupapa is proudly Māori but is also proving rich and inspirational to our former refugee and migrant communities.
Many of those communities come from collective, family-focused cultures that have much in common, spiritually and socially, with Māori. Over the years, it has become clear that the six core values that underpin E Tū Whānau resonate strongly with those communities
E Tū Whānau kahukura (leader) Naima Ali, explains in this video why this kaupapa speaks to so many former refugees and migrants.
E Tū Whānau’s approach to working in partnership with refugee and migrant communities is available in our Mahere Rautaki/Framework for Change 2019-2023.
The stories below show E Tū Whānau in action in the different communities that make up the rich diversity of Aoteaora. These stories are grouped under the four priority action areas in our Framework for Change.
Hapori / Community development
– supporting communities to build capacity and capability to lead and sustain community-level change. The focus is on building leadership; reduced community tolerance for violence; increased commitment and networks to implement change; and strengthened indigenous practitioner capacity.
- “You are us. We are you”
- Coming together for the greater good
- Prestigious award for E Tū Whānau Kaimahi Jenny Janif
- Intercultural connection the future of Aotearoa
- Ahmed Tani ONZM for services to refugees
- E Tū Whānau team provides “gracious support” in Christchurch
- Ngāi Tahu manaaki newcomers
- Refugee communities share stories
- “Humanity must come first” says Afghani leader
- Poetry a cultural collaboration
- Cultures connect through art
- Serving others creates happiness
Whānau / Family strength
– work includes family/faith/community engagement, focus groups to scope issues; building connections between ethnic specific, faith and mainstream groups and services; building protective factors (parenting support, cultural identity, ancestral legacy and pride).
- Dr Hashem Slaimankhel’s legacy endures
- NZ loses an inspirational leader in Afghan tragedy
- Refugee films tell moving stories
Tane ora and Wahine ora / Wellbeing for men and women
– community-specific work with men and women separately covering goal setting; parenting; children and elders; building financial capability; strengthening links to community services and support.
- South Asian film tackles domestic violence
- Tikanga and faith – Māori Muslim wāhine
- Goal setting course opens doors for Syrian Kiwis
- Women share stories of resettlement
Rangatahi / Youth development
– PALMs (a multi-ethnic youth movement which is part of the ETW kaupapa) national and regional wānanga; leadership development; capability development.
- Power of storytelling to create change
- Sharing stories, creating connections
- Young men from refugee backgrounds praised for being “hard workers”
- Hope is the centre of Wellington PALMs future plan
- Young Muslim leaders share values
- WOWMA wows UN Youth Summit
Want to know more about E Tū Whānau?
Read about the E Tū Whānau values or browse resources based on the E Tū Whānau values
Sign the Charter of Commitment and sign up for our Pānui
Read more E Tū Whānau stories of positive change.