The arrogance of this is breathtaking. These are schools where hundreds of Māori students are experiencing educational success, some for the first time in their lives.
The large majority of the kura are being run by Māori for Māori, some by Pasifika for Pasifika. All have close relations with their whanau and families who send their children there. Sometimes that's the first time a family has had the chance to make a considered choice about their child's education, and it's the beginning of becoming empowered.
Some of the schools are providing classes for whanau and parents to help them learn how to support their tamariki with their school work. The kids, some of whom had dropped out of school, are going to school and are eager to learn. Iwi have actively invested in the schools.
In my role on the authorisation board for the schools, I've visited every one of them. I've talked to the whanau, the teachers and the children. I've seen what they are achieving and studied the evidence of their performance.
The schools report on their educational achievement and the students' attendance and engagement at school. Most are performing well above national averages and some are far above the rest of the country, in particular in results for Māori students. Attendance is high.
But the Government ignored all this. They refused to visit the schools or study their results or talk to any of the people involved in them. Does the minister think we can't be trusted to take responsibility for building our own capability to do things for ourselves?
I've seen this happen countless times. Governments have decided to do things "for" us, rather than let Māori do things for ourselves. I've watched billions being spent on government and NGO initiatives designed to fix our problems. But things keep getting worse.
The state school system has largely failed Māori and is now failing Pasifika. A majority of Māori are leaving school without qualifications. On an average school day around half of all Māori and Pasifika secondary school pupils are truant. The truancy rate in my home town of Rotorua is one of the worst.
My plea to the minister is to stop this injustice. My plea to all New Zealanders is to speak up against it. Hold our politicians across all parties, Māori and Pakeha, to account for it. And stop the cold-hearted removal of a model that is giving 1300 young New Zealanders, and hopefully many more to come, a better chance at life.
• Sir Toby Curtis chaired the Iwi Education Authority for tribal immersion schools, was instrumental in establishing Māori broadcasting, and served on the Partnership Schools/Kura Hourua Authorisation Board.