NZ10
Just Maori
Maori
is the story of the Polynesians really. But since we are in the year 1250 AD
or so for this page, I spin this yarn thinking about how it was then.
Hokulea is kind of proof that my story is
not that farfetched. This ship proved
the concept of people using boats, ships to spread themselves out. Similar
boats were used even before 1250 AD, before the settlement of NZ. All the
Polynesian and/or Micronesian Islands were colonized this way. Some folks think
that people all over the world were actually spread by boats of some kind. As a youngster I remember Heyerdahl’s Kon-Tiki adventure,
proving that Egyptians could have settled the Americas. Ah history is so diverse,
who knows what is right.
Let
us go back to NZ and the Maori and their story.
Carbon
dating tells us there were no people on NZ before 1250 AD. None! (Really?)
I
can accept the fact that people came by boat from somewhere, but it was not
just one man, not even one couple who came, it must have been a bunch of
people; even a bunch of boats? And their purpose was to settle someplace, to
move on, to find living space.
So
where was the over-population, where were the crowded conditions in 1250 AD? Or
was it part of a culture to let one’s young people go to find better, newer
land because the land around them was over-fished, over-hunted, deforested or over-planted? I imagine that people
needed more space, had to move on in order to have a future. This happened a
lot in history, only one son could inherit the father’s land, so where did his
brothers go? Or, like on some Islands like Easter Island, the trees were cut
down, the ground no longer yielded a good harvest, etc. and people started
to starve.
So,
yes, people who could afford it, moved their youngsters to other places but…
they had to find those places. I am sure if someone just came to your house and
settled in you would push them out, so those folks without a house have to go
somewhere, but where to? Today, in 2019 there are no more unexplored areas,
areas to move into. Yes, we have emigration, immigration, etc. and yes, some
places are overcrowded. So do we go to Mars next?
Voila,
the beginning of a trend? A mass spreading out of people who needed space;
needed newer, better possibilities than being hungry at home. Again, this
happened all through history. The question I have with NZ is, where exactly did
those people come from? Where are their roots?
We look at their languages and we can tell today that most of the
Polynesian Micronesians have a basic root language. We don’t know who else
speaks like them, we are not smart enough to decipher heritage by language
alone.
So the next level to search for the roots of all Polynesians is a DNA analysis. And all signs today point to Taiwan.
Wow, I did not know that! Certainly,
people mixed with other people when they encountered them. So all DNA is kind
of lopsided, but it helps to look at DNA.
So
the first boat to come to NZ finds a very, very large mass of land totally
empty of other humans. And there are no wild animals around. Just put yourself
in their shoes for a moment. What do you do? You plant some of your plants you
brought with you, hoping the seedlings you carried will grow here, but you find
out not all of the seeds you have make it through the growth cycle. You might
even have had some domesticated animals with you (pigs?) and it took some time
to ‘grow' those. The newcomers first settled along the shores of the ocean,
they could eat fish and sea animals, find plants, find mussels, clams and made
a living so to speak. What amazes me is that within the next 50 years a few other boats arrived from? Did they communicate by going back to the ‘old' spot they
came from? How did they get back? Where was it?
Ah,
their mystic stories tell of a place called Hawaiki where all departed souls return. Back to their
homeland, back to where the Maori originated.
Other Totems Depict Warriors |
So
was this the place where all the boats started, where the Maori came from? It’s
just intriguing to think about. It’s food for anthropologist, and related
sciences.
The
Maori who live in NZ today are modern folks. Most are very proud of their
heritage and I can understand their point of view. Their culture was developed way before Capt. James Cook came to NZ in about
1769. They
had little in common with Christianity, with Western thinking and even their
art was very different. Their representation of 6 of their gods is one of the best examples I know. The
depiction of their gods was simple, elegant, and different. To the point where
no Western mind could comprehend it at first. Maori, the people of the four
winds in the land of the long white cloud, are teaching us, even today, that
being different and having a different belief is an OK thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment