Tohu Māori — Māori motif
Ārai · Tiaki · Collective sovereignty
The fortified palisade — collective protection, organised sovereignty.
Cultural context
A pā tūwatawata is a fortified Māori settlement — the palisade fence (tūwatawata) being its defining architectural feature. The palisade consisted of upright stakes, often elaborately carved, positioned to create layers of defence, controlled entry points, and a protected interior.
The pā was not merely a defensive structure. It was a complete social and political organism: a place of governance, food storage, spiritual protection, and communal life. The architecture encoded a worldview — who is inside, who enters, on what terms, under what tikanga.
Te Pā Tūwatawata, the Māori-owned data infrastructure project, takes its name from this. The metaphor is precise: servers placed on marae as the stakes of the palisade, tikanga as the governance protocol, the community as both the inhabitants and the kaitiaki.
Crucially, a pā was not closed. It had gateways — carefully managed points of entry. The goal was not isolation but controlled sovereignty: knowing who enters, on what terms, and what obligations they carry when they do.
In this course
Module 2 — Te Pā Tūwatawata hei tauira. The pā is the model for Māori-owned digital infrastructure. Controlled entry. Tikanga governance. Community ownership. Servers on marae.
Wider tradition
Strategic pā sites are found throughout Aotearoa — hilltop, coastal, riverine. Many remain as archaeological sites. The architecture encoded tino rangatiratanga: absolute authority over the space and its relationships. The tūwatawata (palisade stakes) were often carved with ancestor figures — the past literally standing guard over the present.
Tiaki — Download social cards
6 messages × 4 platforms = 24 cards. Click to download SVG — use directly on X, Instagram, Facebook, or TikTok.
Akoranga — Learning activity
If you were building a digital pā for your community — draw the architecture. Who is inside? What tikanga governs the gateway? Who are the kaitiaki? What can never enter? What must always be available? Draw the concentric rings and label each one.
Toha — Social copy
Tweet 1 — Ārahina tō pā ake
A pā isn't just a fortress — it's a model of sovereignty. Controlled entry. Tikanga governance. Community inside. Te Pā Tūwatawata is doing this for Māori data. Free course 👉 [link] #TePāTūwatawata #MāoriDataSovereignty
Tweet 2 — He pā matihiko
Digital infrastructure governed by tikanga. Servers on marae. Data that can't be sold. This is sovereignty in the 21st century. tepatuwatawata.io Free course 👉 [link] #KiwiDialectic
Tweet 3 — Hangaia
Build the systems you want to live inside. The pā was not given — it was built. So is the digital sovereign future. Free course 👉 [link] #TinoRangatiratanga #KiwiDialectic
Kōrero Tāhūhū — Full thread
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