No Haka Please: We Are Maori
I love the Haka, it is powerfully emotive and more than any other aspect of Maori culture it is an expression of the passion, vigour and identity of that race.
I am not Maori; I am a white boy that grew up in the middle of the South Island in a small town with wide streets and narrow views. Most of the inhabitants were Pakeha which wasn’t really even that relevant a term given there was only 1 Maori family.
I had an appreciation of Maori culture from my father (a teacher) who taught me what he had learnt from his time living in Taranaki (where I was born).
As a New Zealander I cringe at the way that the Haka has been overcooked. Lately it seems that everywhere I look I see it being rolled out like a well-used party trick.
There has been some incredibly poignant use, like the funeral of Sir Paul Reeves, but this seems to get undermined by a bunch of Brisbane based ex pats or a flash mob in a shopping mall.
It is sad that if you Google the word Haka you deal with All Black images galore, advertising agencies, tea towels and tee shirts.
Personally I would never do it and I dare all those that do to ask themselves this question.
Can you sing the National Anthem in Te Reo?
View more Dispatch posts
Back to DispatchLottie Consalvo – The Invisible World
We’ve long admired Lottie Consalvo’s work and the way it occupies that delicate space between what’s seen and what’s felt. Her paintings and performances seem to exist on the edge...
Permanent Style Magazine
The second issue of Permanent Style magazine is arriving soon, and it represents a notable evolution from the debut. The most anticipated development is the expansion of exclusive content: five...
Grace & Flora
We’re pleased to now have our store flowers created by Grace & Flora, led by florist Hannah Low. Her arrangements have featured in our spaces before, most memorably for special...