|
HISTORY
The ancestors of the Maori migrated to New Zealand some 1000 years
ago, when Polynesian sailors found this land during one of their
expeditions. This expedition sailed south from the island of Hawaiki.
It is said that when the leader of the expedition, Kupe, saw the
land in front of him it appeared as a huge white cloud. He then
called the land Aotearoa, or Land of the Long White Cloud.
Several
hundred years later many chose to follow Kupe's route, probably
due to food shortages and overpopulation on Hawaiki. As they arrived
they either mixed with or displaced the people already living
there. The Maori were warriors and many wars took place between
tribes. The losers often became slaves or were eaten; the Maori
believed that they could gain the enemy's power by eating the
body of the enemy.
The Maori
first encountered Europeans in 1642 when the Dutch explorer Abel
Tasman anchored offshore. Several of his crew were killed and
eaten and he quickly left. He decided to call the land New Zealand,
after the Dutch province Zeeland. It was not until 1769 that the
next ship arrived. This time it was a British ship with Captain
Cook, who actually got to know the Maori. When Captain Cook arrived
there were probably about 100,000 - 200,000 Maori. After his visit,
the English decided it would be a good idea to colonize the island.
The Maori
quickly learned the ways of the English (language, customs, etc.)
but resisted their efforts to colonize the country. There was
a lot of fighting that led in the end to the treaty of Waitangi
in 1840. In this treaty the Maori agreed to be ruled and protected
by the British Queen, but were allowed to keep their land. They
would also become full citizens of England. The new settlers,
however, wanted the Maori land for themselves. The Maori refused
and fighting broke out again. There was full warfare between the
Maori and the English from 1860 and 1865. Because of their superior
weapons the English were victorious and the Maori had to give
up most of the land they had been promised. Within twenty years,
the Maori had lost the culture and ancestral lands they had cherished
for centuries.
The Maori
people suffered severely after the war with the English. Disease
and prostitution came with the new settlers. There was a demand
in the West for severed heads and the Maori chiefs started to
cut off the heads of their slaves to sell them. Also, the Europeans
brought guns with them and the Maori often used them against each
other. The Maori not only lost their land, but had to give up
much of their culture and language. Due to these changes their
population dropped to about 42,000.
The 1840
treaty is still a political issue for the Maori today because
they believe that the English tricked them out of land that was
rightfully theirs. Since the 1970's the Maori have tried to get
back some of the land that was taken from them, and focus more
on their traditional culture. They had almost completely lost
their language, religion and way of living. The struggle to survive
culturally and to regain what was taken some 150 years ago continues
today.
|