Kakala Malie Incorporated Society

Tongan culture helps weave communities together

Some children weaving at Kakala Malie - desktop

Type of Funding

Partnership Grant

Year of Funding

2023–2024

Amount of Funding

$91,000

For almost 20 years, Dr Jeanne Teisina has been working with her mother to build a beautiful environment for local children to thrive and embrace Tongan culture. With help from MAS Foundation, they’re now bringing joy and connection to the whole community.


For early childhood expert and educator Dr Jeanne Teisina, running the Akoteu Kato Kakala ECE Centre in Ōtara is both a calling and a birthright.


Jeanne’s mother, Meleane Lolohea Pau'uvale (ONZM), started the Tongan early childcare centre from the family garage in 1999, and over the decades it has not only grown and thrived, but garnered the attention of the Prime Minister for its wonderful pioneering work.


To this day, both women are still working hard to see the little people in their care – and their whānau and communities – flourish together.


“Before we migrated from Tonga, my parents had both been teachers for 20-plus years,” says Jeanne. “They moved here so my sisters and I could further our education, and once we did my mum was working as a reliever and looking after lots of kids in the family. She noticed there was a need to continue sharing Tongan language and culture with these kids, in a safe place while their parents were working, so she started a playgroup.”


What started as a small initiative gradually morphed into something much more, built with hard work and sacrifice from Meleane. “My mum worked for almost 10 years with no pay, trying to get her degree, get qualified and get her licence here. Then in 2004, Prime Minister Helen Clark came over to our humble garage to announce that there would be funding to open the centre. In 2006, we became licensed and moved out of the garage and into where we are now.” 

Dr Jeanne Teisina outside by a fence

Dr Jeanne Teisina

Nourishing through culture

The centre is brimming with colour and the sounds of children playing and laughing, but is located in a part of South Auckland that has long been economically deprived, and where many families struggle in the face of social inequities. “Our centre is like an oasis in Ōtara that is building hope for our tamariki.”


The philosophy of the centre, which is governed by the Kakala Malie Incorporated Society, is encapsulated in its name: Kato Kakala. “In Tongan culture, kakala refers to the garland made of the fragrant flower, and the kato is the woven basket,” Jeanne explains. “The belief that we have as educators and facilitators is that we are the kato that holds these different kakala, and that our job is to make sure that they bloom and flourish, that they don’t wilt.


“We make sure every child is thriving, including when they move on to primary school and beyond. The statistics around here portray a different reality for our tamariki and their families, but we try to stand against that and build from the grassroots up. Our work is also highly recognised by the Education Review Office (ERO) within the realm of Pacific ECE. For us, that reaffirms our commitment to building a collective sense of belonging. ”

Jeanne and Meleane began talking with MAS Foundation about how to continue this important work of connecting into the wider community and passing on the knowledge of Tongan cultural traditions while engaging every generation of whānau.


From there, they developed the Fatu Lālanga programme of workshops. “Fatu means heart and lālanga means weaving, so this is about weaving the theories and the practices together to ensure that our whānau and our tamariki are thriving together.”


Along with initiatives supporting the physical health of family members through exercise and access to gyms, they spent time together making kakala garlands. “When we’re doing the kakala, we get to discuss all sorts of different topics, and for us it’s therapeutic. All the busyness of the world disappears.”


Mafi Funaki-Tahifote (Head of Foundation) says, “The Fatu Lālanga programme of workshops align closely with the Foundation’s value of ‘Whiria Te Tangata’. Kakala Malie weaves theories, practices, cultural insights and people together to thrive, not only within Akoteu Kato Kakala ECE Centre but also to the local and wider communities at large.”

Dr Julie Wharewera-Mika (Head of Foundation) adds, “Kakala Malie uplifts cultural wisdom and intergenerational leadership at the heart of community, championing locally-led solutions that honour identity, strengthen whānau and help every child and family flourish together.”



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