Graduate follows in footsteps of trailblazing Pacific women

Giovanni Torre
Giovanni Torre Published September 11, 2025 at 7.00pm (AWST)

Lisi-Malia Teaura Nuulopa Pereira carried the legacy of generations crossing the stage on 10 September, receiving a conjoint Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Laws degree.

Her name reflects more than lineage - it's a tribute to the ancestors who have guided her journey.

The 22-year-old Sāmoan-Chinese, Cook Islander, Tokelauan and Tahitian described feeling excited and nervous about the ceremony.

"I'm so happy that everything worked out, I want to thank my family who travelled to be here, and also to all my friends as well," she said.

Born in Taufusi, Sāmoa, Lisi-Malia is the eldest daughter of Benjamin Pereira and Audrey Brown-Pereira, who travelled from Sāmoa.

"We've come from Sāmoa to celebrate this day," said her mother Audrey, an alumna of the University of Auckland.

"I'm a very proud parent but as her father Ben says, she's great with words and numbers," adding it was extra special given her own connection to the University.

Lisi-Malia says her upbringing in Sāmoa was steeped in the values of faith, family and service passed down from her ambitious and aspirational great-grandmothers.

Paternal great-grandmother, Lisi Vaai, was a trailblazer, leading from the front: a teacher, principal, and the first Sāmoan woman Public Service Commissioner. She raised seven children and many more extended family members after being widowed young.

Lisi Vaai turned adversity into strength, having faced discrimination for having mixed Sāmoan-Chinese heritage and being abandoned by her father.

"Education was sacred to her - the one inheritance no one could take away," says Lisi-Malia.

From her maternal side, great-grandmother Teaura left her home in Atiu, Cook Islands to work in isolation on the very remote island of Mauke, sacrificing her dreams, to provide for her family.

From great-grandmother Nuulopa, Lisi-Malia learned that a gentle and loving nature can become a great source of inspiration for the family.

"The love and kindness we give, always comes back to us when we need it most," she said.

It was important to acknowledge the strength and resilience of Pacific women says Lisi-Malia, highlighting their vital roles as carers, educators and artists, that have shaped community and society.

Lisi-Malia says pursuing a university education was inevitable, following the example set by the quiet achievers from her family. Her late aunty Ula (AloSāmoa Erna Vaai Aiono) was CEO of the Sāmoa International Finance Authority.

Her aunty Lei (Ioana Chan Mow) is a professor at the National University of Sāmoa and her uncle, Afoa Asiata Kolone Vaai, served as Financial Secretary for the Ministry of Finance.

Her father Benjamin is an economist and consultant, and was Assistant Governor of the Central Bank of Sāmoa. Mother Audrey is a renowned poet, Executive Officer at the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme, and a former diplomat.

Even her grandfather, Anthony Jose Pereira, played a pivotal role in Sāmoa's political history, helping draft the constitution for the Human Rights Protection Party - an origin story often overlooked in today's political narratives

But it hasn't been an academic journey without struggle for Lisi-Malia.

"I have always felt our islands are strong and invincible, but in so much of the literature and theories we study, we are treated as backwards or not recognised at all," she said.

This disconnect between lived Pacific realities and academic frameworks led to periods of depression, especially during the isolation of COVID-19 lockdowns.

However, that changed when Lisi-Malia began working as a research assistant at Te Poutoko Ora a Kiwa (Centre for Pacific and Global Health).

"The things I felt were missing from my studies - I found within Te Poutoko," she said, engaging in research that centred the wisdom of Pacific peoples, especially those living across the region.

"They wear many hats, they maximise what they have, and they take on the practical application of knowledge. No book could ever describe their experience."

Lisi-Malia (right) and her mother Audrey Brown-Pereira. Image: Simon Young.

Lisi-Malia credits leaders like Professor Sir Collin Tukuitonga and Nalei Taufa for showing her what is possible when leadership is grounded in service, strategy and community accountability.

"They challenge the status quo through research, advocacy and innovation," she said.

"They hold themselves to the highest standards of accountability to our communities."

She noted success isn't measured by traditional academic metrics at Te Poutoko Ora a Kiwa; instead research is translated into real outcomes for Pacific communities.

"We are not breaking barriers to fit into existing structures," Lisi-Malia said.

"We are building limitless possibilities for Pacific Islanders to lead research that shapes our own futures."

She says her story is a powerful reminder that Pacific leadership is not new - it is ancestral; rooted in the strength of women who she is named after: Lisi, Teaura and Nuulopa.

As a young leader Lisi-Malia, not only honours these trailblazers but is committed to forging new paths for the generations to come.

   Related   

   Giovanni Torre   

Download our App

Article Audio

Disclaimer: This function is AI-generated and therefore may mispronounce.

National Indigenous Times

Disclaimer: This function is AI-generated and therefore may mispronounce.