Thursday, August 07, 2008

Tales of Maori cannibalism

Left-wing and liberal propaganda promote the false view that the West in its quest to explore and colonise new lands set in motion a downward spiral for local cultures from which they have never been able to recover from.

The picture is painted of natives living in idyllic tranquillity picking daisies, bunnies hopping in the meadows, contentment all around, a harmonious existence brutishly interrupted by the foreigners from Europe that sought to exploit them.

The truth however can not be farther from the truth – unless you view
cannibalism and mass human sacrifice to be acceptable.

Even into the 20th century (1959) cannibalism was still widely practiced in Papua New Guinea until the Australian government outlawed the practice.

A new book reveals the truth about Maori cannibalism in New Zealand stopped by the "invaders". Yes, those evil Europeans, how dare they bring civilised norms to those savages?

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Maori cannibalism was widespread throughout New Zealand until the mid 1800s but has largely been ignored in history books, says the author of a new book released this week.


Paul Moon said his new book, This Horrid Practice, looked at the Maori tradition of eating each other in what was a particularly violent society before Europeans arrived in New Zealand.

Cannibalism lasted for several hundred years until the 1830s although there were a few isolated cases after that, said Professor Moon, a Pakeha history professor at Te Ara Poutama, the Maori Development Unit at the Auckland University of Technology.

He also said infanticide was also widely practised because tribes wanted men to be warriors and mothers often killed their female daughters by smothering them or pushing a finger through the soft tissue of the skull to kill them immediately.

He said the widespread practice of cannibalism was not a food issue but people were eaten often as part of a post-battle rage.


Enemies were often captured and killed later to be eaten or killed because of a minor transgression.

"Rather than disposing of the body it was prepared to be eaten," he said. Part of the practice was also to send a warning to other tribes. "One of the arguments is really if you want to punish your enemy killing them is not enough. If you can chop them up and eat them and turn them into excrement that is the greatest humiliation you can impose on them."

Prof Moon said historians often said Maori were not cannibals and based their findings on European standards. "The amount of evidence is so overwhelming it would be unfair to pretend it didn't happen. It is too important to ignore," said Prof Moon.

The head of the Maori Studies Department at Auckland University, Professor Margaret Mutu, who had not read Prof Moon's book, said cannibalism was widespread throughout New Zealand.

"It was definitely there. It's recorded in all sorts of ways in our histories and traditions, a lot of place names refer to it. "It was part of our culture."

She said Maori cannibalism was not referred to by many historians because it was counter to English culture. "You will get your English-based historians who come out of an English culture who don't understand it and avoid it because they don't understand it. "If you don't understand it you're risking misinterpreting it badly if you try to address it."

Prof Mutu said she knew of no Pakeha historians who knew how to balance parts of the Maori culture they could not see an equivalent to in the English culture. "If you don't understand the things you are talking about you take one hell of a risk."

She said Prof Moon did not understand the history of cannibalism and it was "very, very hard for a Pakeha to get it right on these things especially when they don't know how to interrogate it from within the culture and interrogating it from within the culture means interrogating it from within the language. "He is braver than I would be," she said.

4 Opinion(s):

Dark Raven said...

...same thing with the Native American Indians, also an image of 'earth people' in tune with nature and living a holistic life style...meantime back at the tee pee..

Truthseeker said...

Oh goodie, another modern day doofus who thinks everyone was evil until the white man rescued them from their barbaric ways.

Bollocks.

Anonymous said...

I wasn't raised in NZ, but i'd like to think that everything I was taught as a child about the history of my people wasn't a lie. Therefore I feel like I must say somthing on behalf of the old queers whose knees i once sat at attentively as a child.
Not all Maori tribes were cannibals. As it is, I believe that only a few select Tribes across NZ ate their enemies, not all the Maori people. However, these so-called cannibilistic tribes were few and far between, and so the eating habits of these maori's can not be laid on the heads of ALL MAORI'S. To claim so, would be like saying ALL eauropeans and the like are responsible for the hundreds of deaths of innocent young woman, whom fearful, adultery, lustful men condemend as witches yes. Now if i remember the songs correctly, though it does not excuse the old ways, the only parts of the body that were consumed was the heart and liver. The rest of the body was put on display to warn other enemies of what would happened to those who tried to take their land, or hurt their own. This actually reflects a little of the European culture does it not, when a wrong doer was hung and than left on the city walls as a warning to others.

It's not that i wish to contradict the research, for research is research, but i was raised to beleive that the Maori history was passed to the people through song and dance, not written word.

Lindsay said...

Dear Anonymous, research is research as you state, and perhaps you could research the well documented accounts of the Musket Wars and the extensive cannibalism that took place then.
The trouble with asking the people who undertook cannibalism to explain it is to us so we can get the 'real' truth is that it then behooves us to ask the Nazi war machine to explain its genocide of Jews etc. Aslo falling back on oral histories again means we would then need to not read anything from the current Celtic nations who had oral histories thousand of years prior to Maori. Cannibalism, floggins beheadings, ritual rape, etc etc all happened. Use history to record it , but don't defend it... own it and move ahead.