Maori Myths and Legends | ßÏßϽûÇø /news/category/maori-myths-and-legends/ The gateway to learning English in New Zealand Fri, 18 Jun 2021 03:13:19 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2020/07/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Maori Myths and Legends | ßÏßϽûÇø /news/category/maori-myths-and-legends/ 32 32 MÄori Myths and Legends Part 1 – How MÄui Slowed the Sun /news/maori-myths-and-legends-part-1-how-maui-slowed-the-sun/ /news/maori-myths-and-legends-part-1-how-maui-slowed-the-sun/#respond Mon, 30 Apr 2018 10:03:32 +0000 /blog/maori-myths-and-legends-part-1-how-maui-slowed-the-sun/ As with the indigenous people of many countries, New Zealand’s MÄori have a rich tradition of storytelling that’s been handed down through the generations. Amongst the cherished stories are myths and legends which give us an interesting and sometimes magical take on the origins of Aotearoa and the earth’s creation. This oral history is retold […]

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As with the indigenous people of many countries, New Zealand’s MÄori have a rich tradition of storytelling that’s been handed down through the generations. Amongst the cherished stories are myths and legends which give us an interesting and sometimes magical take on the origins of Aotearoa and the earth’s creation. This oral history is retold by elders on (MÄori meeting house) and in classrooms around the country. One such tale is that of MÄui and how he tamed the sun…

Not enough hours in the day?

It’s a common complaint from busy students and sightseers– “there just aren’t enough hours in the day.†Long before daylight savings was invented, giving us more time to enjoy the warm summer evenings, MÄui took matters into his own hands.

The young man and his three brothers were preparing a hÄngi for their dinner. A hÄngi is a traditional MÄori method of cooking that sees food cooked over heated stones, under the ground. They had only just finished up heating the stones when the sun set, making it too dark to see.

Forced to eat food he couldn’t see, MÄui shared his frustration with his brothers, telling them of his plan to catch the sun before it rises and to force it to travel across the sky more slowly. They thought he was talking nonsense, laughed, and quickly pointed out the obvious – the sun is too hot and far too large to be caught.

A magic tool capable of amazing feats

MÄui waited for his brothers to stop laughing before pulling out the sacred jawbone of his grandmother, Murirangawhenua. He listed all of the other impossible feats he had achieved like using the jawbone to catch the greatest fish in the world (New Zealand’s North Island) and gaining fire from Mahuika (the goddess of fire), eventually convincing his people to help him capture the sun.

The next morning MÄui and his whÄnau (family and community) gathered copious amounts of flax. MÄui taught them how to weave the flax into long ropes. Five days later they had completed enough rope to capture the sun and MÄui said a special karakia (MÄori prayer to invoke spiritual guidance and protection) over them:

“Taura nui, taura roa, taura kaha, taura toa, taura here i a TamanuiterÄ, whakamaua kia mau kia ita!â€

A secret journey under the shelter of night

That night, MÄui and his brothers collected the ropes and trekked eastward in the direction of the rising sun. During the day they would hide under bushes and trees, so the sun wouldn’t notice them approaching. Along the way they collected water as part of their secret mission.

Twelve nights later MÄui and his brothers arrived at the edge of the huge pit in the ground where TamanuiterÄ (the sun) was sleeping. They constructed huts around the edge of the pit to hide the flax ropes and used the water they’d collected to soften the clay and build walls to shelter them from the sun’s heat. They shaped the ropes into a noose around the pit before dawn and MÄui instructed his brothers to wait until TamanuiterÄ raised his head and shoulders into it. He would then yell to them to pull tightly on the ropes.

Bloody Sunrise

A sunrise to fear

At the last minute MÄui’s brother began to have second thoughts. Fearing for their lives they tried to leave before it was too late. But before they could, TamanuiterÄ started to rise out of his pit. MÄui yelled to his brothers, “Pull on the ropes!†Too scared to move, the brothers stayed in the huts. “Quickly! Before it’s too late,†screamed MÄui.

TamanuiterÄ had almost struggled out of the noose when the brothers jumped up and pulled on the ropes. TamanuiterÄ looked down and saw MÄui at the edge of the pit and hurled a flaming ball of fire at him in anger. MÄui dodged the ball of fire, edged closer to the pit, raised his sacred jawbone high above his head and struck it down upon TamanuiterÄ, releasing its magical powers like a flash of lightening.

“Aaarrrhh! Why are you hurting me like this?!†TamanuiterÄ asked of MÄui.         

MÄui drew his magic jawbone down on TamanuiterÄ once again, berating him, “My people do not have enough time in the day because you race across the sky! No longer will you dictate how long our days are. From now on, you will travel slowly across the sky!â€

MÄui’s brothers released the noose and TamanuiterÄ rose slowly into the sky, feeling tired and defeated by MÄui and his almighty jawbone.

When MÄui and his brothers returned to their village victorious, MÄui’s power could never be doubted again. From that day on, TamanuiterÄ always moved slowly across the sky and MÄui and his whÄnau had lots of time to collect food, fish and do their work.

How many hours of sunshine does New Zealand get?

If you’d like to see the effects of MÄui’s bravery, check out the table of below. It looks like Blenheim takes the honour of being New Zealand’s sunniest town with an average 2487 hours of annual sunshine. For comparison, New York gets 2535 hours, Tokyo 1881, London 1481 and Beijing 2748.

New Zealand Sunshine Hours
SI Sunshine hours

Images:

Bloody Sunrise by under

 Source:

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