E-Tangata
E-Tangata
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WAKA Episode 6: A vision for the future
After weeks of hard work, the waka/wa'a/va'a/vaka are ready to be launched at Kororāreka (Russell). Simone Kaho spent time with expert waka carvers from across the Pacific, and discovered that making waka/wa’a/va’a/vaka requires more than artistic and technical skills.
Waka is a six-part online video series produced by Tawera Productions in collaboration with E-Tangata and the New Zealand Herald as part of Tuia 250. It was made with the support of NZ On Air. A version of this story was also published in the Herald.
Просмотров: 7 548

Видео

WAKA Episode 5: No log needed - just a 3D printer
Просмотров 6 тыс.3 года назад
Derek Kawiti is making a waka, but there’s no log and no carving. He’s using a 3D-printer to create a life-size replica of an ancient Hawaiian wa’a. Derek shows us how in Episode 5 of Waka, a six-part video series which traces the revival of waka building through four teams from across the Pacific. Waka is a six-part online video series produced by Tawera Productions in collaboration with E-Tan...
WAKA Episode 4: The edge of old times
Просмотров 7 тыс.3 года назад
For nearly three decades, an unfinished kauri va’a hung in a Northland shed, waiting for its creator, the Tahitian master carver Puaniho Tauotaha, to return. He never made it back, but, in 2019, his son was finally able to finish his father’s work. Simone Kaho meets Freddie Tauotaha, who features in Episode 4 of Waka, a six-part video series which traces the revival of waka building through fou...
WAKA Episode 3: Creatures of Perfection
Просмотров 9 тыс.3 года назад
Alika Bumatay’s teammates call him “the Hawaiian Jack Black” because he’s constantly cracking jokes. But when he talks about wa’a, it’s a different story. “Wa’a means everything,” he tells Simone Kaho. “It’s a family member.” Waka is a six-part online video series produced by Tawera Productions in collaboration with E-Tangata and the New Zealand Herald as part of Tuia 250. It was made with the ...
WAKA Episode 2: The Future
Просмотров 12 тыс.3 года назад
At the Rātā carving symposium in Whangārei, the 25-year-old Billy Harrison, just three years out of carving school, is leading the Aotearoa carving team. Waka is a six-part online video series produced by Tawera Productions in collaboration with E-Tangata and the New Zealand Herald as part of Tuia 250. It was made with the support of NZ On Air. A version of this story was also published in the ...
WAKA Episode 1: The Revival
Просмотров 36 тыс.3 года назад
For centuries, Pacific navigators voyaged across the world’s largest expanse of water in oceangoing waka, populating every habitable corner of Moana-nui-a-Kiwa, guided by a highly sophisticated navigation system that relied on a profound knowledge of their natural world. Like many ancestral traditions, though, the knowledge of wayfinding and waka building was almost lost as a living practice, d...
Conversations: Naida Glavish
Просмотров 7875 лет назад
Dame Rangimarie Naida Glavish ends our six-part Conversations series. Here Naida recounts the famous incident in 1984, when she stood her ground against the Post Office to defend her right to say “Kia ora” to callers. She has continued to lead cultural change in various ways since then. She’s been a high school teacher of te reo and tikanga. President of the Māori Party. The head of her Ngāti W...
Conversations: Pepe Robertson
Просмотров 4125 лет назад
Pepe Robertson is a mother and grandmother, a former primary and secondary school teacher who taught in Porirua and Newtown, an oral historian, Pasifika early childhood educator, VSA worker, Red Cross volunteer, and all-round community stalwart. Here she talks about the impact of New Zealand rule in Sāmoa, which had tragic consequences for her own family: her grandfather, Migao, was shot dead b...
Conversations: Emeline Afeaki-Mafile’o
Просмотров 4815 лет назад
Before she was out of teens, Emeline Afeaki-Mafile’o felt a special responsibility. She’d just lost her closest friend, a “blood sister”, to cancer. So there was deep, deep grief. But from that grief emerged a commitment to live the full life denied her friend. Of course, there’ve been other motivations. As a New Zealand-born Tongan, she’s seen and experienced the disconnect (and its consequenc...
Conversations: Moana Maniapoto
Просмотров 9525 лет назад
Moana is a singer-songwriter, whose interests and talents have not only earned her a place in Aotearoa’s Music Hall of Fame but have also spilled way beyond music. Early on, Moana gathered up a law degree at Auckland University before music began dominating her life. But, along the way, she’s taken the time to be a radio talkback host, wear a variety of hats in television and in documentary pro...
Conversations: Selina Tusitala Marsh
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.5 лет назад
Dr Selina Tusitala Marsh is a poet and scholar who is used to being “the first”. She was the first Pasifika to graduate with a PhD in English from the University of Auckland, where she now works as an associate professor in the English, drama and writing studies department. She’s also the first Pasifika woman to be appointed New Zealand’s Poet Laureate - an award celebrating outstanding contrib...
Conversations : Pania Newton
Просмотров 20 тыс.5 лет назад
Pania Newton is fighting for her whenua and her whānau. At 28, the Auckland University law graduate is the youngest of six cousins from Ihumātao village, Auckland, leading an effort to protect the whenua they grew up on. Their group, SOUL - Save Our Unique Landscape - is working to prevent a proposed 480-house development that risks bulldozing over a unique piece of New Zealand’s history. Ihumā...

Комментарии

  • @mattressfour20
    @mattressfour20 Месяц назад

    What an amazing person.

  • @mattressfour20
    @mattressfour20 Месяц назад

    Listening to Pania brought tears to this Pakeha's eyes.

    • @ourpeople-g7r
      @ourpeople-g7r Месяц назад

      Does this bring tears to your pakeha eyes? News from the Rotorua Daily Post: "Child, 2, dies after Rotorua driveway accident, family member steals from doctor trying to save child's life." As hospital staff tried to save the life of a 2-year-old boy run over in a Rotorua driveway, a family member swiped a doctor's two phones and a bank card and went on a spending spree. The child died a short time later but Melissa Herewini (A MAORI) had already taken the bank card to four stores in Rotorua and bought alcohol, food, petrol, phone credit and cigarettes.

  • @barbsmart7373
    @barbsmart7373 Месяц назад

    I know why this has come up on my phone. It is because of my interests. And things I have been writing about, which correlate with the end of this korero. I was 20 years old with 1 or 2 children when I first started in 1981 doing 2 papers every year or two at Uni. I did not study law, but I did Maori papers and am privileged to have learned from Dr Ranginui Walker, Dr Anne Salmond and others. I am a pakeha and took my 3rd child to Kohanga in 1985- another incredible experience. We learned waiata to perform as well. Another Mum there told me that it never occured to her go to University. It is intriguing what you remember after 38 years. I am amazed at different things that fit into my own views and life. So I am very grateful to have seen this. I didn't really know anything about this wahine before today. But I really loved listening to this. I am glad I set an example to my children to value their father's Tainui roots even thogh he definitely didn't. I am so, so grateful to all the generations of Maori....but am in awe of the people who started Kohanga Reo ( and other things) and managed to turn things around. Thankyou so much for your amazing contribution in Aotearoa, Moana. This was a real thrill to listen to. And it is an incredible thrill to see the revival of te reo and tikanga all around me. I feel the confidence and esteem which I know wasn't noticeable around me when I was young. By the way, as soon as I started getting some grey hair, the rangatahi on Hamilton streets started helping me and checking on me. I noticed a lot of things. I can't believe my luck being on an island with such strong, kind, generous, accepting, forgiving staunch people.

  • @KORIEKAOPUIKI
    @KORIEKAOPUIKI Месяц назад

    ALOHA PANIA. I WAS WONDERING IF YOUR STARS ON THE ASTROLOGI€AL €HARTS ARE B14 B16?? A SIN€ERE MAHALO NUI LOA FOR SHARING THIS. I LOVE NEW ZEALAND (ATEROA). I AM IN LOVE WITH YOU ALREADY G14 & G18

  • @Silvius.2
    @Silvius.2 2 месяца назад

    Some more branches eyes in wood for canoe some stronger its canoe! Not easy to build but blady strong vorever.

  • @malcolmx2647
    @malcolmx2647 3 месяца назад

    Use traditional tools and gain respect

  • @robertbaldwin5771
    @robertbaldwin5771 3 месяца назад

    How big does a kauri tree need to be to carve a waka from main trunk?

  • @xHCGxHRTY_SA_
    @xHCGxHRTY_SA_ 4 месяца назад

    Not the same doing it by hand u giving aroha to it to come alive

  • @WihauWikeepa-gs9so
    @WihauWikeepa-gs9so 4 месяца назад

    Feeling inspired ❤

  • @BuzzNuttz001
    @BuzzNuttz001 5 месяцев назад

    Awsome watch ❤

  • @ourpeople-g7r
    @ourpeople-g7r 5 месяцев назад

    A windscreen wiper (Commonwealth English) or windshield wiper (American English) is a device used to remove rain, snow, ice, washer fluid, water, or debris from a vehicle's front window. Almost all motor vehicles, including cars, trucks, buses, train locomotives, and watercraft with a cabin-and some aircraft-are equipped with one or more such wipers, which are usually a legal requirement. A wiper generally consists of a metal arm; one end pivots, and the other end has a long rubber blade attached to it. The arm is powered by a motor, often an electric motor, although pneumatic power is also used for some vehicles. The blade is swung back and forth over the glass, pushing water, other precipitation, or any other impediments to visibility from its surface. The speed is usually adjustable on vehicles made after 1969, with several continuous rates and often one or more intermittent settings. Most personal automobiles use two synchronized radial-type arms, while many commercial vehicles use one or more pantograph arms.

  • @Bruin4Life
    @Bruin4Life 5 месяцев назад

    The canoes are beautiful and it was great watching the men building them.

  • @ourpeople-g7r
    @ourpeople-g7r 5 месяцев назад

    The avocado (Persea americana) is a medium-sized, evergreen tree in the laurel family (Lauraceae). It is native to the Americas and was first domesticated in Mesoamerica more than 5,000 years ago. Then as now it was prized for its large and unusually oily fruit.[3] The tree likely originated in the highlands bridging south-central Mexico and Guatemala.[4][5][6] Its fruit, sometimes also referred to as an alligator pear or avocado pear, is botanically a large berry containing a single large seed.

  • @jacobkopa-nathan7626
    @jacobkopa-nathan7626 5 месяцев назад

    Very insightful. Kia ora

  • @paul5434
    @paul5434 6 месяцев назад

    Once you find the right mix or a better plastic becomes available it will be amazing what you will achieve The most expensive Patu is the plastic one it's well over 100 year's old it was made before plastic was even a thing. We received it back it's priceless and it's also extremely beautiful.

  • @paul5434
    @paul5434 6 месяцев назад

    Your craving is from a deep place such wonderful work my Bro you will be something else when you become a Senior Aroha my Bro...Chur

  • @paul5434
    @paul5434 6 месяцев назад

    Waka is the highest point of technological innovation of our Maori history. So wonderful to see the flame is still burning.. Maori pride these are the things that make us... And I agree the old master's would of used any new tech to achieve the job.. So good to see the young sister be accepted Aroha Guy's.. ATUA Bless Maori ⚖️ Jeebus 🙏

    • @ourpeople-g7r
      @ourpeople-g7r 5 месяцев назад

      It´s common knowledge that maori had not discovered metals before the Europeans arrived in New Zealand. The wheel was discovered around 3500 BC. Had maori discovered the wheel before the Europeans arrived in New Zealand or were they not that far with their technological inovations there either?

  • @ReiSpitz
    @ReiSpitz 6 месяцев назад

    Quite a history about the Maori - put the Inca's or the Aztecs to shame in degeneration. Outcast from the Cook Islands during the 13th century as weaker primitive Neolithic people by later waves of Polynesians (Maori were from the original wave of primitive Polynesians pushed right out across the Eastern Pacific by successive stronger more advanced groups arriving from the west). They were outcast on rafts and some floated to the North East Coast of NZ driven by the South Equatorial Current and were stranded for 500 years. The weaker were pushed down to the South Island or Chathams etc. So the South Island Maori (had their own language) were the weakest of the weak. They were captured and eaten as 'Slave flesh' by the northern Maori doing raids. (Well they all ate each other - 80% of Maori pre European were dark skinned easily fattened slaves farmed and eaten by a lighter skinned 'Ariki' thin wiry elite royal caste). So it was with some righteousness as well as British cunning that they armed the southern Maori who then with muskets launched a genocidal war on the north.. That plus measles & flu halved the Maori population and removed most of the elite. The British then liberated the slaves and outlawed cannibalism. The northern Maori fought with the British against the south bad west Maori 'rebels'. The Maori sued for peace and a treaty was signed that removed all sovereignty and made them subjects to the English crown where the English would protect them from each other. Land could only be sold to or via the Crown. Maori could live on their reservations with native custom but none did. The treaty of Waitangi is strikingly clear in that the Maori cede sovereignty completely and become citizens of Great Britain - all 3 clauses lock that in. Nothing in today's 'Maori' culture is authentic. The music - all European (Maoris did not have tonal music, the songs are missionary tunes or introduced - Poi dance is from Islands and Stick dance from old Malaya. The carvings and art - all European - Arabesques that was the fashion at the time. Original Maori had limited dash carving and no painting of objects. No written language - all the syntax & grammar plus vowel inflection is European. No technology - some lagoon canoes and wood or stone Neolithic tools. No food sources - like pigs or crops - they left that all behind, all they had was a weak inbred fox (now extinct), some rats and a weak dismal pacific yam. They ate out all the bird-life including 10 species of Moa and 46 other bird species, didn't know how to farm the sea as were island people and so they turned to societal cannibalism. Today - no full blood or half blood left. No genuine tradition and almost all are offspring of Maori slave females sold to white settlers for muskets or food. -So more fake than the 'Sioux' or 'Cherokee' or 'Crow' who had at least retained some genuineness about who they were and their history. -Everything you 'saw or experienced' is fake. A totally convected disneyfied tokenistic set of inventions fueled by a grievance culture of mixed-race imposters fetishing a false past bad history because it pays benefits. 'This Horrid Practice' - Professor Paul Moon, "A Savage Country" Professor Paul Moon 'Behind The Tattooed Face' - Heretaunga Pat Baker, 'Anthropology In The South Seas' - H D Skinner

    • @andrewmacdonald9367
      @andrewmacdonald9367 6 месяцев назад

      What the actual heck did I just read? Wow... You are saying some wildly inaccurate things!

    • @ReiSpitz
      @ReiSpitz 6 месяцев назад

      @@andrewmacdonald9367prove it.

    • @ButterflyMatt
      @ButterflyMatt 5 месяцев назад

      Peoples did not spread and thrive in new lands by being pushed there because they were weak. That’s a lie that imperialists tell themselves to excuse their inhumanity.

    • @ohnean1
      @ohnean1 4 месяца назад

      @@ReiSpitz You're the one spewing this shit so the burden of proof is on you, and your pack of white professors and anthropologists don't count ... if we're not telling the story ... it's not our story !!

    • @kingkalki5212
      @kingkalki5212 3 месяца назад

      Lol what type of coloniser bs is this we are the royalty of hawaiki the homeland of all Polynesians and perhaps even the South Americans themselves

  • @hayzIsherwood
    @hayzIsherwood 8 месяцев назад

    Hika ma. Ka mau te wehi!

  • @sharondonnelly6902
    @sharondonnelly6902 9 месяцев назад

    A very beautiful story of pride of doing what the kaupuna of the pacific have done and are still doing. Mahalo Nui for working form the heart to produce a Va’a that teaches and heals the past and plants seeds for the future. We are all one in the Va’a. Aloha Gil Donnelly

  • @ironclay3939
    @ironclay3939 10 месяцев назад

    1:41 into this video and This is in Whangarei - I recognize the shed - I really don't like the way our country is going right now

    • @ourpeople-g7r
      @ourpeople-g7r 7 месяцев назад

      You don´t like the types of sheds that are being built in the country nowdays?

  • @westernsellers9148
    @westernsellers9148 10 месяцев назад

    Smart baby maama

  • @Chas-te7uz
    @Chas-te7uz Год назад

    Nah. Not down with this. No tradition in that. My tupuna never used 3d printers.

  • @Paul-nj7vc
    @Paul-nj7vc Год назад

    Maori 🎸 Jeebus

  • @Paul-nj7vc
    @Paul-nj7vc Год назад

    I wont to learn my Brother... We will build the Waka of ATUA For NZ and we will build one for Australia to sit in the Paramata River docked in the stretch that is on Maori land. Gifted to the Maori 700 plus years before Captain Cook arrived... Approx 100 hundred acres We want it BACK. Hi Frank be seeing you soon Maggot🖕

  • @puwhenua62
    @puwhenua62 Год назад

    LOL I can imagine Raina giving you that tough love. I am glad that you have embraced this wonderful space

  • @shoutatthesky
    @shoutatthesky Год назад

    As white person of this land I am so grateful for the wisdom our Māori brothers and sisters share. To see this wisdom nurtured and passed down the generations is beyond special. Thank you for sharing this video!

    • @taraishot100
      @taraishot100 Год назад

      Thanks bro good to see a pakeha acknowledging our culture wish we could all just respect each other

  • @judazrimene
    @judazrimene Год назад

    Mean kuzzie mauri toa

  • @n.o1987
    @n.o1987 Год назад

    Mauri Ora whanau... What a cool watch!!! 😍👌🏽

  • @markhoward552
    @markhoward552 Год назад

    Ngati Tupaware.....plastic whakaaro, plastic Maori, you said it yourself in not so many words "didn't want to contaminate the mana of the waka tuturu by allowing it to set out in their company"

  • @davidstockman2868
    @davidstockman2868 2 года назад

    Thanks 😊

  • @tp3musicproductions979
    @tp3musicproductions979 2 года назад

    colonised whakaaro mate

  • @tp3musicproductions979
    @tp3musicproductions979 2 года назад

    lol what a joke

  • @Tye_ellison
    @Tye_ellison 2 года назад

    Wow awesome video I hope this hi tech machinery can assist us in whakairo it is the carver or artist that give an object its spirit I hope it doesn’t one day replace the carver.

  • @Sciolist
    @Sciolist 2 года назад

    I keep looking for videos of all this being done but with stone tools, and I'm still looking. That Polynesian made ocean going canoes with stone tools is important part of the history, it is a such a skillful craft to preserve and show. But it is almost never shown.

  • @kiamanawatini9512
    @kiamanawatini9512 2 года назад

    🤎💙🤎

  • @manawanuitini7676
    @manawanuitini7676 2 года назад

    🤎💙🤍 He tangata, he tangata, he tangata 💚💜❤️

  • @manawanuitini7676
    @manawanuitini7676 2 года назад

    🤎💚🤎 💜💙💜

  • @raybreeze2841
    @raybreeze2841 2 года назад

    What rubbish

    • @kevenwatson6443
      @kevenwatson6443 2 года назад

      i have been struggling with how to tell my grandchildren that there are people who are going to hate you because you are maori, but i want to prepare them for what they will eventually encounter, I'm dreading the day they feel sad for just being them

    • @drinkingup2157
      @drinkingup2157 Год назад

      @@kevenwatson6443 Our mokopuna should never feel sad for who they are. Your support and guidance along with the rest of your whanau and having knowledge of their whakapapa should arm them for whatever they might have to deal with.

    • @kevenwatson6443
      @kevenwatson6443 Год назад

      @drinkingup Kiaora ra after a year of reading stuff like this I know now just how bad the racism is in our country I knew it was out there just didn't realize how bad this is the perfect platform for cowards too just make up a name and away you go that's how I explain it to the mokos now, just faceless cowards

    • @shoutatthesky
      @shoutatthesky Год назад

      Shame on you Ray the racist. From a white fulla.

    • @Chas-te7uz
      @Chas-te7uz Год назад

      Yeah, most pakeha are rubbish alright.

  • @YEURCKIES
    @YEURCKIES 2 года назад

    😍😍

  • @chrisdunham7169
    @chrisdunham7169 3 года назад

    Love it, love it all !

  • @debbielacey6229
    @debbielacey6229 3 года назад

    Hello to you all. ❤️What a beautiful journey you all have done. 💝 Thank you so much for sharing this as I have been mesmerised by it all. Absolutely wonderful. Thank you. Sending out lots of love ❤️ to you all. 🧡💚🙏💛❤️❤️

  • @ktjhape2163
    @ktjhape2163 3 года назад

    FROM ME TO NGA WHANAU O IHUMATAO I WISH THE HIGHEST OF IOIO MATUA KORE. BLESSING NGA WAIHINETOA ARE THE LIFE GIVERS LIKE PAPATUANUKU . MAN HAS ALWAYS TREATED HER AND DISRESPECT HER . NGA WAIHINETOA WILL ALWAYS STAND AND SUPPORT PAPATUANUKU PERIOD. BECAUSE OF THIS . BACK IN 1871 THE RICHEST OF THE RICH .UP-TODATE TRUMP HAS TAKEN OUT THE QUEEN , VATICAN, OBAMA, BIDEN'S ALL DEMOCRATS TRUMP HAS TAKEN ALL THEIR ASSETS BY FORCE . THE NEW GOLD AND SILVER CALLED NESERA AND GESERA WILL COME ON LINE . TRUMP IS BACK IN THE WHITE HOUSE .