the maori creation_story (2)

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By: Brianna Clemente, 1/17/12 Period 4th Culture and Geography Source: George Grey, 1956, Polynesian Mythology( ed. by William W. Bird): Christchurch, Whitcombe and Tombs Ltd., 250 p. (Bl 2615.G843p 1956) Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, part 2 "The Maori Creation Story: The Separation of Heaven and Earth"

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Page 1: The maori creation_story (2)

By: Brianna Clemente, 1/17/12Period 4th Culture and Geography 

Source: George Grey, 1956, Polynesian Mythology( ed. by William W. Bird): Christchurch, Whitcombe and Tombs Ltd., 250

p. (Bl 2615.G843p 1956)

Contemporary Traditional Maori Culture, part 2 

"The Maori Creation Story: The Separation of Heaven and Earth"

Page 2: The maori creation_story (2)

According to the Maori tradition " All humans are descended from one pair of ancestors, Rangi and Papa, who are also called Heaven and Earth

 

Page 3: The maori creation_story (2)

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

 

Page 4: The maori creation_story (2)

Rangi and Papa had six sons: 1 Tane-mahuta, the father of the forests and their inhabitants.

 

Page 5: The maori creation_story (2)

 

Tawhirimatea, the father of winds and storms.

Page 6: The maori creation_story (2)

 

Tangaroa, father offish and reptiles.

Page 7: The maori creation_story (2)

 

Tu-matauenga, father of fierce human beings.

Page 8: The maori creation_story (2)

 

Haumia-tikitiki, the father of food that grows without cultivation

Page 9: The maori creation_story (2)

 

And the Rongomatane, the father of cultivated food.

Page 10: The maori creation_story (2)

 

In the begging 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.