Te Hana Slideshow
A slideshow of images from Te Hana Te Ao Marama, Maori Cultural Centre
TIME Unlimited Tours - Auckland New Zealand Maori Cultural Tour
MAORI TOURISM
This video is about MAORI TOURISM
New Zealand 2015: Te Puia Maori Culture
笑到眼水都標! VIP Tsang adds a lot of laughters to the Maori Culture Show, a must watch! :)
New Zealand Maori Culture
A Welshman on his travels around New Zealand (2013/14) experiencing Maori Culture. Filmed @ the Tamaki Maori Village, Rotorua.
Desa Wisata A La Suku Maori
(Antara)-Pusat Kebudayaan dengan mengusung konsep desa wisata, dapat menjadi salah satu upaya untuk melestarikan budaya. Seperti yang terdapat di Auckland Selandia Baru, dengan nama Te Hana Te Ao Marama Cultural Center, yang menghadirkan kembali sejarah kehidupan suku asli Selandia Baru Suku Maori.
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Maori Culture Experience Auckland War Museum
On a recent tour to the Auckland War Museum we had a stop off into the Maori Cultural Experience.
This included a lesson in ancestral games and how they were helpful in aiding the men in their battle training and how they learnt to use melodies in their songs.
All topped off by something spectacular at the end!
Maori Village
Te Kane: Maori Village
Te Ao Marama Reunited - Aue Ha
Mitai Cultural Village - Haka
Recording of the Haka performed at the Mita Cultural Village in Rotorua, New Zealand
Tamaki Maori Village Rotorua
The Powhiri. Robins Have Wings at the Tamaki Maori Village near Rotorua, New Zealand, Jan. 2014. Read more at robinshavewings.com
Maori Cultural Heritage 05
HAKA
Maori culture charms New Zealand visitors
The haka or traditional Maori dance is often people's first taste of New Zealand's indigenous culture.
Tours and cultural experiences are giving visitors to New Zealand a greater understanding of the history, culture and arts of the country's indigenous people, the Maori.
Maori people make up just under a fifth of New Zealand's population and their arts include wood carving, weaving, music and dance.
A Maori carved totem pole - known as a 'pou' - welcoming visitors to Arataki Visitors Centre in Auckland.
Here, Ceillhe Sperath from TIME Unlimited Tours is running cultural tours which showcase Maori history and culture.
Ceillhe is of Maori descent herself and is also part Irish.
She's from the Ngapuhi tribe in New Zealand's Northland region.
As part of this culture tour which she leads, Ceillhe speaks about Maori history, arts and culture.
She also helps visitors pronounce Maori words and teaches them about New Zealand's native plants and birds.
Maori people are indigenous to New Zealand.
They refer to New Zealand as 'Aotearoa', which translates into English as 'The Land of the Long White Cloud'.
According to Statistics New Zealand, Maori people make up some 15 percent of the population.
Along with English, the Maori language is an official language of New Zealand.
According to Te Ara, the Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, it's thought the settlers who eventually became the Maori arrived in New Zealand in canoes from Polynesia in the 13th Century.
Before European colonisation, Maori were not called Maori - that name came with colonisation.
It was not until the 1650s that the country was discovered by Dutch explorer Abel Tasman.
British explorer James Cook's team sighted New Zealand in 1769.
New Zealand's founding document - the pact between Britain and Maori, called 'The Treaty of Waitangi' - was signed in 1840.
Maori arts include wood and bone carving and weaving along with music and dancing.
Experiencing Maori culture first hand is one of many reasons people travel to New Zealand.
Ceillhe says she hopes the experience of meeting Maori people face-to-face will be something that stays with visitors for a long time.
When people have a Maori experience they leave with the sense that it's a living culture - that they're not just being processed at a show or in an attraction, she says.
But they feel like they met a local, they get a sense for the traditions that we hold true, but also how we've blended it with modern living to make sure our culture survives not just this generation but future generations.
Ceillhe believes that many people make the long trip to New Zealand to learn about Maori culture and history, as well as to see the scenery.
If you're coming be prepared to be 'wowed', she says.
I think our country is beautiful. It's got the environmental, it's got the Maori culture that makes it unique. But I think, the essence of our culture we always talk about the famous whakatauki, the proverb of 'he aha te mea nui o te ao?' What is the greatest thing in this world? 'He tangata. He tangata. He tangata.' It is people. It is people. It is people. Anyone that's travelled knows that if you have a great people experience it will be a memory you'll have for life. And that's why I'd encourage you, New Zealanders love to embrace people. You've come a long way, if you make the investment we'll look after you. And hence the term 'haere mai, nau mai, piki mai, kake mai' - come and be welcomed.
Joe Sherman is here visiting New Zealand from his hometown of Columbus Ohio in the United States.
He says listening to Ceillhe and being on the Maori Culture Tour has taught him a great deal.
Once this stage of the tour is complete, it's off to the volcanic cone of Mount Eden or 'maungawhau'.
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J103-NZ-rotorua maori village (1)
Fav Maori performance 12102011261.mp4
Beautiful performance by Maori youth who were sent to entertain us at the Picton ferry terminal because our ferry to Wellington had been canceled.
Picton Marlborough Maori Cultural Highlights
Whariki - Hawaiki Tu Productions
Whariki Maori Business Network member - Hawaiki Tu
Haka from Te Puia in Rotorua, New Zealand
The Maori Haka at the Te Puia evening show in Rotorua, New Zealand
Pure New Zealand Culture
Pure New Zealand Culture