St Paul's Collegiate School — Apr 29, 2020

While speeches are traditionally delivered in front of a live audience, the Waikato regional competition of the Race Relations Speech awards held in mid-April 2020, were presented via Zoom due to NZ’s Covid-19 lockdown.

The Race Relations Speech Competition is run by the New Zealand Police and Baha i community. It was first held in 1998 after the establishment of Race Relations Day in order to allow young people a platform to discuss what race relations in New Zealand should look like.

Open to years 11-13 students, the top speaker from each regional competition goes through to the national semi-finals vying for a place in the national final. Speeches must be between 8-10 minutes long and are scored according to the toastmaster's marking criteria (50% content, 30% delivery, 20% language)

This year’s theme was “Titiro whakamuri, kia anga whakamua – to face the future, look to the past.”

Students were asked to address at least two of the following questions in their speech:

David Koshy, Diya Kurien, Gretel Muir, Sarah Wikara and Ethan Bidois competed in this year’s Waikato regional competition and three came away with the top three places - Diya Kurien in third place, Gretel Muir in second and Sarah Wikara winning the competition.

Teacher-in-charge, Mrs Heidi Lewis said while it was unusual for students to be presenting through Zoom on a digital platform, they all looked comfortable on the camera.

“Each of their speeches was unique and compelling. I have no doubt we will see some of them as future leaders or initiators on a national platform in some capacity in the future,” says Mrs Lewis.

Sarah Wikara will now proceed to the national semi-finals in mid-May. We wish her the best of luck.