Top storiesNew ZealandPoliticsBusinessEntertainmentSportsWorld

Pōtiki Poi: Māori teenager's business flourishes and expands

Tuesday, 25 May 2021

Māori TV's, Tapatahi, breakfast show host, Billie-Jo Rōpiha, speaks with fourteen-year-old Georgia Latu about her company and her new book.

Fourteen-year-old Georgia Latu is the chief executive behind Pōtiki Poi, a business that makes, sells and distributes poi and earrings while sharing mātauranga Māori.

Her business has environmental and social values at its heart, using op shop and second-hand materials, with biodegradable plastic. She’s also about to start selling a new book called Ngā Mihi, in partnership with creative agency Māui Studios.

“We partnered alongside Māui Studios with the graphics which talks about the whakapapa of poi, so how our poi came to be, the creation story and telling it in a way that tamariki and kaumātua can understand.”

Latu says she wrote the pukapuka during the Covid-19 lockdown last year after thinking about strategies on what would happen after Covid-19.

Georgia Tiatia Fa
Georgia Tiatia Fa'atoese Latu is 14 and, with her mum Anna, runs a business with making authentic poi.

**READ MORE:

* Study: School streaming destroys kids’ self-belief

* This Kiwi grandmother has one of the biggest royal-themed accounts on Instagram

* 'It's definitely appropriation': Use of tā moko in Cyberpunk 2077 video game

**

“I was writing a pukapuka with Mum and then in the past six months, we just thought we need to create it. So we partnered with Maui Studios and hopefully, fingers crossed by Matariki, we’ll be able to release this pukapuka around the whole motu.

'Making poi, I love giving back to my taha Māori and spreading it across the whole world.'

How Pōtiki Poi came about

Latu was 12 when she started the business.

“I needed to fundraise for a wānanga. We didn’t have the pūtea at the time and mum said ‘Well you make gifts, koha for your friends so why not try it as a fundraiser.”

Latu then ended up raising $1000 in three days.

“I then went to a business boot camp and they taught us how to think strategically. This was held in Kirikiriroa and from there won People’s Choice Award then went on social media and now we’re here.”

Georgia lives in Dunedin and goes to Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Ōtepoti her favourite subject is kapa haka.
Georgia lives in Dunedin and goes to Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Ōtepoti her favourite subject is kapa haka.

She says the business is named after her ancestor Tahu Pōtiki who led her people to the South Island.

“Pōtiki also means, youngest child. My youngest brother was born with Trisomy 21 and I want to ensure my business will someday support him and others like him in our community.”

Support from her mum

Latu says a huge pou in her life has been her māmā, Anna Latu.

“My mum is the main driver and everybody says ‘You’re just like your mum. You just go for it.’ Okea ururoatia! (Keep fighting). If nobody does it, who will.”

Anna works fulltime at the University of Otago as senior lecturer at the pharmacy school for Hauora Māori. She also works part-time at Pōtiki Poi.

“So we’ve got a lot of people working full-time jobs and balancing Pōtiki Poi at the same time but [Mum] is the director. I call her my PA because I’m the CEO. Mum's my PA and we work together as a team.”

Poi workshops

As well as running the business. Latu also hosts poi workshops.

“A lot of people think we run workshops on how to make poi but we actually run workshops on the whakapapa of your poi. So you learn it through skits, through workshops and then at the end I teach some kapa haka, she says.

“So depending on the rōpū I’ll teach either advanced poi or just an easy poi so everyone knows the parts of your poi and where it comes from.”

Passion for tā moko

Latu is a student at Te Kura Kaupapa Māori o Ōtepoti and has her eyes on becoming a tā moko artist.

“My all-time dream is to become a tā moko artist. Ever since I was a little baby through kōhanga I used to draw on all of my skin. So ever since then I’ve been drawn to the art and learning about my whakapapa in a different way. When I’m older, once I learn all the mātauranga, I’ll go back and give all that mātauranga to my next ahurea so that the tradition will stay alive.”

This story first appeared on Te Ao – Māori News website and has been republished on Stuff with permission.