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Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2 ''The Maori Creation Story: The Separation of Heaven and Earth'' By: Julian Gomez, 1/23/2012 Per:4 Culture and Geography Source: George Grey, 1965, Polynesian Mythology(ed. by William W. Bird): Christchurch, Whitcombe and tombs Ltd., 250 p. (BL 2615. G843p 1956); and Mr. Ruben Meza, 2012

Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

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Page 1: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2''The Maori Creation Story: The Separation of Heaven and Earth''

By: Julian Gomez,1/23/2012

Per:4Culture and Geography

Source: George Grey, 1965, Polynesian Mythology(ed. by William W. Bird): Christchurch, Whitcombe and tombs Ltd., 250

p. (BL 2615. G843p 1956); and Mr. Ruben Meza, 2012

Page 2: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

(According to Maori tradition) "all human are descended from one pair of ancestors, Rangi and pap, who are also called Heaven and Earth." 

Page 3: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"In those days, Heaven and Earth clung closely together, and all was darkness."  

Page 4: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"Rangi and Papa had six sons: (1) Tane-mahuta,the father of the forest and their inhabitants:; 

Page 5: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"(2)Tawhiri-ma-tea, the father of winds and storms":

Page 6: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"(3)Tangoroa, the father of fish and reptiles";

Page 7: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"(4)Tu-matauenga, the father of fierce human beings";

Page 8: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"(5) Haumia-tikitiki, the father of food a that grows without cultivation";

Page 9: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"(6) and Rongo-ma-tane, the father of cultivated food."

Page 10: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

"In the beginning these six sons and all other beings lived in darkness for an extremely long time , able only to wonder what light and vision might be like.'

Page 11: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

After a battle between the six sons, Tu-matauenga ate 4 of his brothers as  food, sparing Tawhiri-ma-tea, the father of winds and storms.

Page 12: Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, Part 2

this is why today people are fierce and have war, why people eat plants and animals, and why there are storms.