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Encyclopedia > Hapu

Māori culture is a distinctive part of New Zealand culture. It was primarily observed only in Māori society and social gatherings with significant Māori aspect, but with the growth of tourism and exposure of haka to international audiences on TV and at sporting competitions, Māori culture is increasingly seen as fundamental to New Zealand culture. M is the thirteenth letter of the Latin alphabet. ... Culture refers to the customs, arts, attitudes, institutions, and other traits that characterize a particular society or nation. ... The culture of New Zealand is a fusion of Maori culture and that of the descendants of the early British colonists and later settlers, many of whom were of working class origin. ... Haka, by Manutuke School at Hopuhopu Haka is the generic name for Maori dance. ...

Contents

Activities

Many Māori cultural events traditionally take place on a marae, an area of land where the Wharenui or meeting house (literally "big house") sits. However, such a venue, though traditional, is not essential and any place appropriate to the occasion can be used. Generally the Māori language is spoken, though translations and explanations are provided when the primary participants are not Māori speakers. A Maori word now common in New Zealand English, marae refers an area of land where the Wharenui or meeting house (literally big house) sits. ...


Significant Māori cultural events or activities include:

  • The haka - an action chant, often described as a "War Dance", but more a chant with hand gestures and foot stamping, originally performed by Warriors before a battle, proclaiming their strength and prowess and generally abusing the opposition. Now regularly performed by New Zealand representative Rugby and Rugby League teams before a game begins. There are many different haka.
  • Kapa haka groups often come together to practice and perform cultural items such as waiata or songs, especially action songs, and haka for entertainment. Poi dances may also form part of the repertoire. Traditional instruments sometime accompany the group, though the guitar is also commonly used. Many New Zealand schools now teach kapa haka as part of the Māori studies curriculum. Today, national kapa haka competitions are held where groups are judged to find the best performers; these draw large crowds.
  • The Powhiri or Māori welcome, where distinguished visitors are welcomed onto the Marae, or other place. The ceremony generally includes an aggressive challenge dance by a Māori warrior armed with a taiaha or traditional spear, who then offers a token of peace, such as a fern frond, to the leader of the visiting delegation. Acceptance of the token in the face of such aggression is a demonstration of the courage and mana (honour) of the visitor. Following the challenge there may be speeches of introduction, as well as karakia or prayers and the singing of waiata or songs.
  • Tangihanga or funeral rites may take 2 or 3 days and include a lying-in-state where the whole whanau, or family, hold an all night vigil, with the deceased in an open coffin, to farewell them, before a church or marae funeral service and/or graveside interment ceremony. It is traditional for mourners to wash their hands in running water and sprinkle some on their heads before leaving the cemetery. After the burial rites are completed, a meal is traditionally served. Mourners are expected to provide koha or gifts towards the meal.
  • Koha are gifts, generally in kind and often of food or traditional items, though equivalent monetary donations are also called and accepted as koha in many circumstances.

Haka, by Manutuke School at Hopuhopu Haka is the generic name for Maori dance. ... This article discusses the sport Rugby. For other uses see Rugby. ... Rugby league is a team sport, played by teams of 13 players per side (usually plus 4 substitutes). ... Poi, the food Poi is a Hawaiian word for the primary Polynesian food staple made from the stem (called a corm, a type of rhizome) of the kalo plant (known widely as taro). ... The classical guitar typically has 3 nylon and 3 nickel-wound strings. ... Mana refers to a supernatural force said to exist within all things, sometimes associated with maternal or lunar magic in mythology. ... An open coffin A coffin is a box used for the display and burial or cremation of a cadaver. ...

Cultural Concepts

Māori have an number of cultural concepts that have been taken up into the predominant New Zealand culture.

  • Whanau or extended family, this includes any relative, no matter how distant. The whole whanau are responsible for raising the children, not just the parents. The concept has more to do with social relationship and friendship than genetics and bloodlines, and is often difficult for pakeha or non-Maori to properly comprehend. The concept is similar to the clans of Scotland. While the Whanau is the smallest social unit, Hapu or village or settlement and iwi or tribe are larger subdivisions.
  • Tapu, sometimes translated as sacredness or holiness. Things or places that are tapu should not be interfered with.
  • Meeting, with discussion and debate where all viewpoints are heard and considered before a decision is made.
  • Apart from place names, many Māori words have also been taken up into New Zealand English language.

The word whanau, family, means to give birth. "We are bound to our whanau, our family, by birth." The word hapu, extended family group, means to become pregnant. The hapu is made up of family groups bound together by marriage. The word for tribe, the word iwi, also means bones. Whanau is a Maori language word for extended family. ... This article is about the domestic group. ... Pakeha is a New Zealand English word for European New Zealanders, that is, New Zealanders of predominantly European descent. ... Clan (disambiguation). ... Scotland (Alba in Scottish Gaelic) is a country or nation and former independent kingdom of northwest Europe, and one of the four constituent parts of the United Kingdom. ... Iwi (pronounced ee-wee) are the largest everyday social units in Māori society. ... This article is on the social structure. ... Tapu (or tabu) is a concept existing in many Polynesian societies, including traditional Hawaiian, Tongan, and Maori cultures. ... New Zealand English is the dialect of English spoken in New Zealand, often referred to within New Zealand as Newzild. ... Whanau is a Maori language word for extended family. ... A pregnant woman Pregnancy is the process by which a mammalian female carries a live offspring from conception until it develops to the point where the offspring is capable of living outside the womb. ... Iwi (pronounced ee-wee) are the largest everyday social units in Māori society. ...


Dramatic representations

  • The best known dramatic work that features the Māori culture is the acclaimed film, Whale Rider.
  • The movie Once Were Warriors also gained international acclaim with its depiction of modern urban Maori and a potent message about domestic violence.
  • The Bone People is a novel by New Zealand writer Keri Hulme. It won the Booker Prize for Fiction in 1985.

For other uses see film (disambiguation) Film refers to the celluliod media on which movies are printed Film — also called movies, the cinema, the silver screen, moving pictures, photoplays, picture shows, flicks, or motion pictures, — is a field that encompasses motion pictures as an art form or as part of... The Whale Rider is a 2003 book by New Zealand Maori author Witi Tame Ihimaera. ... Once Were Warriors, published in 1990, was New Zealand author Alan Duffs bestselling first novel, and the basis for a 1994 film, directed by Lee Tamahori and starring Rena Owen and Temuera Morrison. ... The bone people is a novel by New Zealand writer Keri Hulme. ...

See also

The Māori word tikanga has a wide range of meanings — code, condition, convention, culture, custom, element, ethic, etiquette, fashion, feature, formality, lore, manner, meaning, mechanism, method, style. ... Taha maori is a New Zealand phrase, used in both Maori and New Zealand English It means the Maori side (of a question) or the Maori perspective as opposed to the Pakeha or European side or perspective. ... Māori (or Maori) is a language spoken by the native peoples of New Zealand. ...

  Results from FactBites:
 
Waitangi Tribunal - About the Reports (5076 words)
It is then apparent that the strength of a hapu rested not on the maintenance of exclusive boundaries but on the extent of their connections.
The historical record also shows that, from at least some 150 years ago, the hapu of the district associating with Ngati Awa operated collectively through runanga, a runanga being a meeting of the elders and rangatira of one or more hapu in the district.
Secondly, the land was confiscated for a subsequent rebellion, but on the facts, the hapu were not in rebellion; they were reacting to an invasion by their former enemies.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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