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MAORI MEMORIES.

INTERESTING VIGNETTES

(Reoorded by “J.H.S.”)

MOKO TUARA. We are familiar only with the moko •r tatu, on the face of the Maori. The conventional dress of the pakeha, to which Nature’s own Maori man or woman were complete strangers, has hidden the moko tuara on the lower end of the back from sight or mention. A lost tradition has it that only the Upoko Kohua, or low born, were so marked on the face to distinguish their Berfdom, and that the Rangatira was tattooed with his tribal emblem on the tuara, which was hidden by the maro (waist mat). After the disastrous retreat from Ngutu o te manu, where •Von Tempsky, Buck, Hastings and ether officers were shot from the Maori ambush in the tall rata trees, an old Maori was seen trotting along an exposed ridge. Shot after shot was fired, but he halted, lifted his maro, turned his back, and bowed his body double. This was regarded as a familiar act of contempt or derision, but he subsequently explained that it was merely to show the distinctive markings of the chief, thus made tapu and safe from pakeha bullets. A more recent use of the Moko luara was that of a well-known lady litigant In the Maori Land Court, Mrs Hamuera. When judgment of the ■court was against her, or when her horse won a race, excitement banished all conventions, and in the presence of the crowd she imitated the old warrior of Ngutu o te Manu, merely to show “birth mark,” the Moko Tuara of jfoyal descent I

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT19330220.2.11

Bibliographic details

Waikato Times, Volume 113, Issue 18875, 20 February 1933, Page 3

Word Count
263

MAORI MEMORIES. Waikato Times, Volume 113, Issue 18875, 20 February 1933, Page 3

MAORI MEMORIES. Waikato Times, Volume 113, Issue 18875, 20 February 1933, Page 3

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