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National | New Year's Honours

Abuse in Care advocate Paora Moyle acknowledged in New Years honours

Paora Moyle: Photo supplied

Thames based Māori advocate and researcher, Paora Moyle has been named as a recipient of The King’s Service Order on the New Years Honour’s List for 2025.

Moyle has been nationally recognised for services to survivors of abuse in care. She says it has been twenty-eight years in the making.

“It was 1997 when I first started to lobby the State to provide better care for tamariki, who are taken from their whānau and put with faith or State-based organisations,” she said.

For Moyle, the acknowledgement is a recognition of what she describes as a deeply person mission. It began with piecing together her whakapapa as her whānau were split up when they were young, taken in to state care and cut off from ancestral ties.

“Of course, we didn’t know what whakapapa was or anything,” she recalled. “But we told stories to one another, stories of the feeling of belonging to something greater.”

“Learning about my tipuna—who they were, where they came from, and how they lived—is a profoundly powerful experience. Understanding their stories, their love, and the care they showed for one another has given me a deeper sense of what whānau truly means.” She said

Over the years, this work evolved. What started as a personal journey became a mission to support others who had suffered in care, helping them find their voices, their histories, and their strength.

“When I first started this work, I didn’t fully know what I was doing—I was just young and driven by the passion of knowing that what happened to me and my younger siblings was wrong. With no parents to stand up for me, I decided to stand up for myself.”

“In our case, the State failed as a parent, yet unlike families who are held accountable when they fail, the State excuses itself. The Royal Commission’s final report has shown that thousands were harmed, not just by isolated mistakes but by systemic failures.”

“Millions have been quietly paid out to silence victims, but we refuse to let this be swept under the rug. Our fight continues to ensure this never happens again.”

It is Moyle’s life’s work.

“I’ve poured my heart into protecting tamariki from the harm caused by being uprooted from everything they know and love. Removing a child from their whakapapa and whenua severs their wairua, their connection to the land and their spiritual guardianship. The harm isn’t just mental; it’s deeply intrinsic.”

In addition to research, over the years Moyle has lectured and designed social work programs to educate social workers working with whānau.

Her son’s pride reflects the profound impact of breaking barriers and being recognised for an extraordinary contribution in the lives of thousands impacted by abuse in State care.

“When I told my son about the award, he couldn’t believe it.”

“He said, you’re kidding me, Mum. Is this really real? As far as I know, no one in our whānau has ever received anything like this. We’re common folk; we do common work. We’re labour class. We just don’t get recognised like that.”

“He’s absolutely thrilled—over the moon, really. He thinks his Mum’s a Queen and said he wants to walk me down the aisle when I receive it.”

Other survivors of state abuse acknowledged in New Years honours

To be Companions of the King’s Service Order

  • Rūpene Paul Amato
  • James William Goodwin
  • Tristram Richard Ingham
  • Leoni Frances McInroe
  • Paora Crawford Moyle
  • Moeapulu Frances Eileen Tagaloa
  • Keith Vernon Wiffin
  • Gary Michael Williams
  • Paul Andrew Zentveld

The King’s Service Medal

  • Kathleen Patricia Coster
  • Hans-Josef Erwin Freller
  • Neta Bernadette Gilbert (Neta Kerepeti)
  • Toni Lee James Jarvis
  • Michael Joseph Ledingham
  • Eugene Shane Te Awamate Ryder
  • Darryl William Smith
Whatitiri Te Wake
Whatitiri Te Wake

Whatitiri is the line up producer for Te Ao Marama. He has reported for TVNZ shows like Te Karere and Marae. He spent two years in the Parliamentary Press Gallery as Political reporter for Whakaata Māori.