About: Eli

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    History of Maori Gods

    Sunday, December 7th, 2008

        The New River Academy has been going to many Maori related cultural activities and I realized I knew little about Maori religion. So I decided that for this blog, I would look up a few Maori gods and their creation story, which goes hand in hand with their gods.

    Students visit a Maori Cultural exhibition. (c) Belle Burche

        The story begins with sky father (Ranginui) and earth mother (Papatuanuku) lay in a tight embrace. They had many children who lived between them in darkness. The children wished to live in light so they forced their parents apart separating the sky from the earth and creating the world we live in today. The Maori believe that rain is the tears of sky father for earth mother and that mist are sighs of warmth as her body yearns for him.
        After the many attempts it took to separate them some of the children began to wish that it had not been done and went into a practical war against the other children. The main one of these is Tawhirimatea, the god of storms. He has children of his own such as wind.  Tawhirimatea attacks the other children such as Tane, the god of the forest and Tangaroa, the god of the sea. All of these fear the attacks of Tawhirimatea, except one group, Tu, which is human kind. All of the gods are bickering now between each other, however Tu subdues them all except Tawhirimatea, the god of storms.
        Tane however decides that Rangi (father sky) should be appropriately dressed and so he searches out heavenly bodies such as the stars, the moon, and the sun and throws them up on to Rangi dressing him in an appropriate matter.
        After reading about this creation story I have begun to see many connections between the Maori religion and the Greek mythology. Both of them begin with the old gods who are the sky and the planet. And in both their children wish to leave and so in Greek mythology they kill them and in Maori simply separate them.
    These connections between the two begin to make me question if there was a connection between the two cultures and if there was, what was it? Was it a common ancestor or just interaction between ancestors?

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    My Late Welcome to New Zealand

    Friday, November 21st, 2008

        I broke my leg during the first quarter, which took me out of commission for a little while. So I arrived to New Zealand late, just earlier this week. Here is how my first day went.
        I was woken up on my plane at about two o’clock New Zealand time, arriving in Auckland 2 hours later. The first thing I did was to take all of my gear through customs. Normal customs, as most of you know, are worried about how long you are staying and what you will be doing. Not New Zealand, they did look into those thing but the thing they cared most about was their bio security. This is just a way for them to check and make sure that you are not bringing anything into their country that would harm their beautiful country. I could already tell I was going to like it here.
         After I caught my plane to Rotorua and Ian picked me up I met the group in a museum in Rotorua. This was a great first experience to have in New Zealand because it allowed me to start my trip with a better understanding of the geology of the region as well as a better understanding of the Maori culture.
        They day didn’t end there. After the museum and lunch we went over to a thermal park and were able to look at some of the geology of the region that we had just been learning about such as hot springs and mud pots.
        My first day in New Zealand was a pretty awesome way to be introduced to the country.

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