Dear readers, we are happy to inform that we have finished analysing the feedback on our last year’s pilot launch of Multicultural Times (MT), New Zealand’s first nation-wide multicultural newspaper. As was the case with our Christchurch-based multicultural newspaper, The Migrant Times (TMT), MT too received innumerable accolades, appreciation and love from all of you. We are also very grateful to various communities, leaders, decision-makers and organisations from across the country who have shown immense faith in the idea of MT, and TMT before that. Based on the feedback, and after a lot of introspection, we have taken two strategic decisions to ensure that we continue to lead New Zealand’s journalism landscape towards diversity and innovation, while staying true to the basic tenets of the fourth estate. 1) The future of journalism is digital. We will continue publishing MT on our various digital media platforms and will cease publication of our print version. The reach, engagement and scope of innovation in the digital space is far superior to print. The financial viability is also superior in digital, due to the trade-off between the cost of production and results achieved. A better reach, engagement, innovation and viability, will ultimately lead to better-quality journalism for our society. 2) The future of journalism is data and artificial intelligence (AI). We are exploring how to use open data and natural language generation techniques to generate quality content and narrative stories, pertaining to local issues relevant to people’s everyday lives. We are immensely excited.

Stay tuned.

Community radio: Faka’amanaki - Tongan radio programme

Community radio: Faka’amanaki - Tongan radio programme

Siale Faitotonu has been broadcasting his ever-expanding radio programme for the Tongan people for 23 years on Plains FM96.9.

Now going by the name Faka’amanaki, the show provides news and support for Tongans, particularly those settling into a new country.

The programme’s title, Faka’amanaki, means “Hope for…” and applies to everything from “Living” to a “Better Future”. The show’s original name had been Taka-i-Fonuamahu (Living in the Promised Land).

There were only about 100 Tongans in Christchurch in1986, while there are more than 2000 here today.

“I analysed our own culture and local issues in depth, and I share all this information so that the Tongan people in Christchurch can fulfil their potential,” says Siale.

Advice can range from how to promote your own business to employment, and medical information from Tongan doctors in Auckland. There are also telephone interviews with experts in Tonga, the United States and Australia.

“The Tongan people find it difficult to adjust to life in a new land. Everything is new, although they have heard a lot about New Zealand and seen it in movies,” says Siale.

“In Tonga, we identify by village. In Christchurch, we identify by what church we go to. But there are some Tongans who don’t go to church. We can reach them through radio. We can give them everything they need to know that way.”

Of course, important days for the Tongan people, such as Mother’s Day, Christmas and New Year are also celebrated on Faka’amanaki, while traditional Tongan music, such as choral numbers, is included.

When Siale first started Faka’amanaki on Plains FM, there were already two other Tongan programmes on the station, one from a community group, the other from a church group.

About 1996, when the show had been going for a couple of years, the Government’s Ministry of Pacific Peoples (now the Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs) offered to fund it as a provider of information for the Tongan people in Christchurch.

Faka’amanaki had been going for about 15 years when Siale linked it up with a similar programme on the Auckland community radio station, Planet FM. Dateline Tonga presents Tongan news and current affairs.

To provide some spiritual nourishment, a further link has since been made with anotherAuckland radio programme, which goes by the same name as that on Plains FM.

A secondary teacher in Tonga, Siale has been in New Zealand for more than 20 years and now runs a laboratory for geomechanics civil engineers at the University of Canterbury.

“I wear so many hats now,” says Siale, who is now also a Justice of the Peace, a translatorfor the courts and Immigration New Zealand.

He is running Tongan-language classes and, for 10 years, has been providing support centres for children through the Kahoa Tauleva Christchurch Trust, which is also involved with the PEETO English Language College.

Faka’amanaki is broadcast on Plains FM at 8pm on Tuesdays and 7am on Sundays.


- Hans Petrovic

Stop the sexual abuse: MSSAT completes 20 years

Stop the sexual abuse: MSSAT completes 20 years

Multiculturalism: Christchurch Polyfest 2017 held on March 18, saw 18 secondary schools across the city, celebrating the Pacific Island cultures

Multiculturalism: Christchurch Polyfest 2017 held on March 18, saw 18 secondary schools across the city, celebrating the Pacific Island cultures