Moriori women, Rēkohu, 1899

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Moriori women, Rēkohu, 1899

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hello orimori/moriori nation. this month i bring this (there was no metagross plush). next year... who knows
#3775 - Rhipidura fuliginosa fuliginosa
- South Island Fantail
I got much better photos of them elsewhere on the trip, because, like their cousins the Willy-Wagtails of Australia (Rhipidura leucophrys), they fear neither God nor Man, and will get up close so they can scream abuse at you, other fantails, and the world.
They don't fear demigods, either - the bulbous eyes and erratic flying behaviour of the bird is attributed to being squeezed by Māui for not revealing the whereabouts of the fire goddess Mahuika, one of his ancestors. Later, when Māui attempted to achieve immortality by climbing through the night goddess Hine-nui-te-pō, a group of fantails laughed at him as he entered her vagina. She woke up and crushed him to death with her obsidian vaginal teeth. When not frustrating trickster figures, they're messengers from the gods, usually reporting deaths.
When they're not busy doing that they eat insects, such as the ones kicked up by humans.
There used to be four subspecies, but the Lowe Howe Island one is extinct. R. f. fuliginosa lives on the South Island, R. f. placabilis on the North Island, and R. f. penita on the Chatham Islands. Local names include pīwakawaka, tīwakawaka or piwaiwaka for the mainland birds, and tchitake for the Chatham Island subspecies.
The latter is very close to the bird's usual call, and the ta rē Moriori name, used by the indigenous people of the Chathams prior to their mass murder and enslavement by Māori from Ngāti Mutunga and Ngāti Tama iwi who arrived on the islands in a hijacked whaling vessel in 1835. There remain just under a thousand people who identify as Moriori, and efforts are ongoing to revive the language.
Moeraki Boulders, Otago, Aotearoa New Zealand.
POV: you are the moriori people and your entire race being labelled cannibals when you were actually pacifists isn’t even the worst lie the Canterbury Museum spread about you
Feel like saying this- if you ever see anyone bring up Moriori people out of the blue in a discussion about co governance or colonial reparations; it should be a HUGE red flag. It's a favorite talking point of racists to "prove" that maori deserved to be colonized and aren't indigenous.
Moriori are from the exact same roots as maori people and arrived here the EXACT SAME FUCKING TIME AS THE MIGRATIONS. The moriori genocide myth has been disproven since NINETEEN SEVENTY SIX.
Yes, many moriori were killed and enslaved by some specific maori. This is and was terrible. But this happened DURING pakeha colonisation, not upon maori arrival to nz. And also pakeha (you know, the people this argument is meant to imply were ushering in a better society for all they were colonising) did nothing to help them despite repeated pleas and having promised to do so in earlier agreements.
They were not a pre-maori group that we killed to make way for ourselves. It is important to acknowledge moriori, and i'm not saying any acknowledgement of them at all is dangerous, but the fact that their history has been appropriated to serve the interests of people who hate moriori just as much as they hate maori, and almost definitely would not be able to distinguish the two, is disgusting.

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More than 450 artefacts from a waka found in pieces in the Chatham Islands expected to reveal new insights about Polynesian voyaging
Absolutely fantastic find!
Buried in the sand and floating down the river, pieces of an ancient waka have been found, but their origin and age remains a mystery.
Possibily the most important discovery in Polynesian archeology:
"A father and son have made the discovery of a lifetime - an ocean-voyaging waka on Rēkohu/Chatham Islands.
The significant archaeological find included 450 pieces, some with unique carvings and braided rope which suggests the waka could be very old.
The specific origin and age remain a mystery, with local iwi and Moriori offering different theories on its history.
Vincent Dix, father of Nikau Dix, said they did know that three bits of timber tested were all from New Zealand trees.
He said they made the finding at the nearby river, accessed through their farm.
"My son and I were just loading the boat up and taking the dogs for a run up the beach, and just after a big rain, and yeah, that's when Nikau my son saw the bits of timber washing down the river." ..."
...continue
There's a film on youtube:
Also an article in the Smithsonian Magazine:
A Fisherman and His Son Noticed Strange Pieces of Wood on a Beach. They Turned Out to Be Fragments of a Polynesian Canoe | Smithsonian
The last native Moriori speaker died over a century ago. Can an ambitious new project bring the language back from the brink?