Maori 130G
My Pepeha
Ko Ben Lomond te maunga Ko Waihi Beach te moana Ko Alexa tōku ingoa
Māori language schools
Kōhanga Reo (pre-schools) Kura Kaupapa Māori (primary) Whare Kura (secondary) Whare Wānanga (tertiary institutions)
Mauri
Life force
Mana tangata
Mana of people. Mana invested in a person according to their deeds and attributes. E.g. if you take on leadership roles, gain respect in the community - this is your mana tangata
Mana Tupuna
Mana of the ancestors. Gods bestowed power and authority on ancestors, which is then inherited. Can be general leadership or role-specific e.g. weaving
Mana atua
Mana of the gods. Sacred power of the gods given to those who conform to ritual and principle.
Mana whenua
Mana of the land. Mana that was planted in the earth mother to give her the ability to support life
Mana moana
Mana of the ocean/seas. Equivalent to mana whenua, but in bodies of water
Mana Māori Motuhake
Mana through self-determination and control over one's own destiny
Matua/Whaea
Mother/aunty or father/uncle
What happened after the treaties?
Māori left as a marginalised, deprived and oppressed minority in their own land, stripped of their lands and natural resources, denied their sovereignty, subjected to racism and discrimination
1830 (ship seized)
Māori owned ship the Sir George Murray seized in Port Jackson
Te Matatini
National kapa haka competition
Sailing ships
Nga Manuao (birds)
1805 (visit to Sydney)
Ngāpuhi rangatira Te Pahi visited Governer King in Sydney and questioned him intensively about foregin laws
Māori
Normal, common. Useful for distinguishing Māori and non-Māori, but within the Māori world your whānau, hapū, iwi and waka define your identity.
Waiata Tira
Not compulsory/non-competitive, harmonic singing, influenced by missionaries
Steps in science
Observation Empirical experience postulation theoretical practice
Doctrine of Discovery
Originated in Rome in 1400s, called for "non-Christian peoples to be invaded, captured, vanquished, subdued and reduced to perpetual slavery and to have their possessions and property seized by Christian monarchs"
1792 onward
Pakeha started settling in NZ in small numbers to exploit the abundant natural resources - harakeke (flax), kauri, whail/seal oil
Wāhi tapu
Places that are tapu
Change of tradition from Pacific to Aotearoa
Sea-based (tangaroa) to land-based (papatuanuku)
Kaitiaki
Spiritual assistants of the gods, minders of the natural elements of the world. They are have a spiritual power (mana) to ensure the mauri of the natural world is healthy and strong. Often manifest in physical forms e.g. animals, trees
Mana
Spiritual authority and power. Comes from the gods, bestowed upon humans to act on the god's behalf
Rakiura
Stewart Island
1820 (visit to England)
Hongi Hika and Waikato visited King Geroge IV in England and agreed to form an international diplomatic alliance
Muskets
Te Ahi O te Tupua (the fire of the demon)
Principle 2
The tool (whakapapa) can be reapplied every time a single phenomena is apprehended
Pakeha lawlessness
The unholy trinity - rum, fistfights and prostitutes
Te Ao Mārama
The world of being and enlightenment, where humans live The Māori system to account for phenomena
Tapu
To spiritually protect people, land and resources. When something is made tapu, it is untouchable, no longer for common use. Laws of tapu are most influential in regulating Māori society.
Principle 3
To understand phenomena, we must understand relationships
Mōteatea
Traditional chant, oldest genre, no choreography. The window to the foresight of Māori
Rāhui
When a temporary restriction is placed over a location, resource or food gathering place
Internalised racism
acceptance of the negative ideologies about one's own ethnic group
Waka
canoes that came from the pacific and carried the ancestors of many different iwi
Te Tiriti O Waitangi
drafted and signed 5 years after He Whakaputanga in 1840 - a treaty of peace and friendship between two sovereign nations Signed by over 500 rangatira, and the British Crown
Whānau
extended family groups (grandparents, aunties, uncles, siblings, children)
Te Tiriti Article 1
gave Queen of England the right to control Pākehā using a mechanism called kāwanatanga
Rohe
geographic regions and landscapes inhabited by whānau, hapū, iwi and waka
Hapū
group of different whānau who descended from a common ancestor. Main social and economic unit in Māori society
Te Tiriti Article 2
guaranteed ultimate and paramount power and authority to Māori over all that was theirs Allowed the Queen and her agents to trade/lease lands of hapū for prices agreed to by agent and land owner (Māori had no concept of "sale")
Te Tiriti Article 3
guranteed to care for and protect Māori and to provide all the rights and privileges of British citizens
Kāwanatanga
loosely translates as governmentship
Does He Whakaputanga have legal standing?
no - British Crown has never accorded it recognition in NZ law, hence it has no legal effect
Why wouldn't Māori cede sovereignty?
no reason to - had held mana whenua for nearly a thousand years Their sovereignty and independence had been asserted by rangatira and by the King of England Outnumbered Pākehā and were heavily armed They had spent the last 50 years building a mutually beneficial relationship with European nations
Interpersonal racism
racially motivated verbal and/or physical abuse
1834 (Te Kara)
selection of Te Kara, the flag of the Confederation of Hapuū of NZ
He Whakaputanga o te Rangatiratanga o Nu Tīreni
the Declaration of Independence of NZ. Drawn up by Busby in 1835, translated into He Whakaputanga, by 1839 signed by 52 rangatira. Statement of the sovereignty or mana of the hapū.
1832 (Busby)
James Busby appointed as British Resident in Bay of Islands to mediate between rangatira and British citizens, to deal with 'acts of outrage by British subjects'
Racism (what colonisation is a result of)
the attitudinal or ideological phenomenon that accepts racial superiority and when present in those in power, justifies them using that power to discriminate against and deprive others of what is rightfully theirs on the basis of their race
Contra proferentem
the international law that states in the event of a dispute over a contract, the law sides 'against the drafter' (i.e. against the English version of Te Tiriti)
Relationship between He Whakaputanga and Te Tiriti
"He Whakaputanga is the parent, Te Tiriti is the child" - Hone Sadler
Te Kara
"The colour" - the flag chosen for NZ. Symbolised a new international status of NZ as an independent sovereign nation, guaranteed protection by British Navy
Waipounamu
"k" in place of "ng" e.g. "Kai Tahu" for "Ngāi Tahu"
Tuhoe dialect
"n" in place of "ng" e.g. "tanata" for "tangata"
1831 (letter)
13 rangatira write a letter to King Willian IV on behalf of 'the Collective Rangatira of New Zealand' asking for his assistance as a "friend" to discipline his British subjects
How many Māori speakers (2013 census)
148,395 - (84%) are Māori
Poi
A ball on a rope that is swung around in choreographed moves
Mātauranga Māori
A body of knowledge derived from a Māori cultural context
Rangatira
A person of mana who can lead the people by holding them together
Whakapapa
A tool of analysis - the idea that two phenomena are related and come together to produce a third phenomena. A vast symbol set used to order, group and locate phenomena
Waiata ā-ringa
Action song, most contemporary Singing, choreography Written in olden days to farewell/welcome back those involved in war
Principle 1
All new phenomena arise from at least two other antecedent phenomena
Haka
Ancient dance traditionally used on the battlefield, or when groups came together in peace
Northland dialect
Aspirated "w" ("hua" sound) in place of "wh"
Vowel length
Changes the meaning of words e.g. manu (bird) vs mānu/maanu (float)
Rekohu/Wharekauri
Chatham Islands
Tuakana/teina
Elder/younger siblings respectively
Koro/Kuia
Elders (grandfathers/grandmothers)
The Treaty of Waitangi
English version of Te Tiriti - except it wasn't really the same document, different translations, was a fraudulent document. Signed by 39 rangatira in Manukau/Waikato after having read and debated Te Tiriti States Māori will give up their rangatiratanga and come under sovereignty of the Queen of England
Whakaeke
Entrance onto stage performance, can be anything Acknowledges hosts, other tribes
Rangatiratanga
Exercise of power and authority derived from the gods, the authority and power of iwi and hapū to make decisions and to own and control resources. Modern term. Inextricably linked with mana.
Moriori
Extinct dialect - no native speakers left
A language can be more advanced than another - T/F
False. Māori has developed specifically to express all aspects of Māori life and culture. All other languages are the same. No language is any more advanced than another.
Kupe
First person to discover Aotearoa through scientific endeavour - watching shining cuckoos migrating and observing they didn't have webbed feet, so land must be to the south.
Pepeha
Formulaic exclamation of identity, used to formally introduce yourself. Expresses identity by locating yourself within the physical landscape and within genealogy
Principle 4
Future phenomena are dependent on 2 or more things coming together to create new phenomena
Taranaki/Whanganui dialects
Glottal stop for "h" e.g. wa-ine for wahine
Tāne
God of the forests. The child of ranginui and papatuanuku that separated them to create Te Ao Mārama
Papatuanuku
God of the land, mother earth
Tangaroa
God of the sea. Relegated to a child of, rather than a partner of papatuanuku in Māori whakapapa
Ranginui
God of the sky, sky father
Tamariki/mokopuna
Grandchildren
Iwi
Groups of hapū that trace their descent from a founding ancestor. Flexible, sort of like a political alliance
Efforts to save Te Reo Māori
Te Taura Whiri i te Reo (Māori Language Commission) is established to preserve and promote the language (but is powerless and grossly underfunded) Māori language schools Māori TV (whakaata Māori) launched 2004 funded mainly by Westpac Mainstream national TV (Te Karere news, Waka Huia, Pūkana children's programme) Iwi/Māori radio (21 countrywide) - Radio Wātea AM 603 in Auckland Films in Māori e.g. Tangata Whai Rawa o Wēneti Māori performing arts e.g. kapa haka competitions
Te Ika a Maui
The North Island
Te Waipounamu/Te Waka a Māui
The South Island
Sea (tangaroa) based to land (papatuanuku/tane) based
The change in whakapapa for Pacific peoples when they came to Aotearoa.
Te Whakaminenga o ngā Hapū o Nu Tīreni
The confederation of Hapū of New Zealand, assembled several times in early 1800s to try to address Pākehā lawlessness.
Tikanga
The correct way to carry out something in Māori cultural terms. Tika = right/correct. Very flexible, vast body of knowledge, wisdom and custom relevant to each iwi/hapū
Te Pō
The darkness, a forming from the potential
Tikanga Marae
The final bastion for tikanga to flourish
Te Kore
The first state of being, a formless void. It is pure potentiality.
Hawaiki
The homeland of all Polynesian people. It is not a specific location, but an ideology
Whanaungatanga
The manner in which everyone in a community is related genealogically. Identity in Māori society is dependent on this - behaviour within the community is determined by the roles people have e.g. tuakana, koro etc.
Kaitiakitanga
The role played by humans as kaitiaki - the whānau and hapū who are mana whenua. Modern term, created so Māori values could be expressed. It is something that needs to be undertaken.
1847-1960s
The time period where English colonial governments used to the education system to wage war against the use of the Māori language, driving it to the brink of extinction
What He Whakaputanga was about
the rangatira of the many hapū of Te Whakaminenga (confederation of Hapū) each maintain their own mana over their own lands No other system of goverenment permitted, only Te Whakaminenga may delegat authority Hapū would meet each autumn at Waitangi Thanked King of England for acknowledging flag, asked him to send a representative to advise them on the Pākehā they were responsible for (which he did, Busby)
Institutional racism
the systematic maintenance and reproduction of ethnic inequality