The group of people performing a haka is referred to as a kapa haka (kapa meaning group or team, and also rank or row).[14] The Māori word haka has cognates in other Polynesian languages, for example: Samoan saʻa (saʻasaʻa), Tokelauan haka, Rarotongan ʻaka, Hawaiian haʻa, Marquesan haka, meaning 'to be short-legged' or 'dance'; all from Proto-Polynesiansaka, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesiansakaŋ, meaning 'bowlegged'.[15]
History and practice
Overview
Haka is a form of indigenous dance that encompasses multiple ceremonial purposes in Māori culture. As Nathan Matthew explains, "it is a posture dance accompanied by chanted or shouted song... One of the main characteristics of haka are that actions involving all parts of the body are used to emphasise the words."[17]
Origins in Māori tradition
According to Māori tradition, haka originated from a creation story. The sun god, Tama-nui-te-rā, had two wives, the Summer Maid, Hine-raumati, and the Winter Maid, Hine-takurua. Haka originated in the coming of Hine-raumati, whose presence on still, hot days was revealed in a quivering appearance in the air. This was haka of Tāne-rore, the son of Hine-raumati and Tama-nui-te-rā.[18][19] Hyland comments that "[t]he haka is (and also represents) a natural phenomena [sic]; on hot summer days, the 'shimmering' atmospheric distortion of air emanating from the ground is personified as 'Te Haka a Tānerore'".[20]
Types and functions
Haka includes various forms serving different ceremonial purposes. These functions include:
welcoming guests (haka pōwhiri),
fare-welling and mourning the deceased (waiata tangi),
giving advice or instructions (waiata tohutohu),
restoring self-respect (pātere),
intimidating adversaries (peruperu – war dance),
and transmitting social and political messages (haka taparahi, ngeri).[17]
The peruperu is a war haka that uses weapons, while haka taparahi is performed without weapons and is the more common ceremonial form. Other forms include:
tūtū ngārahu (similar to peruperu but with sideways jumping),
whakatū waewae (like peruperu with no jumping),
manawa wera (like ngeri with no set actions, usually ceremonial and connected with death), and
Various actions are employed in haka performance, including facial contortions such as showing the whites of the eyes (pūkana), and poking out the tongue (whetero, performed by men only),[5] and a wide variety of vigorous body actions such as slapping the hands against the body and stomping of the feet. The body serves as the instrument and vessel of delivery, with the key aspect being the words and the message they contain.[17]
18th and 19th centuries
The earliest Europeans to witness haka described them as being "vigorous" and "ferocious".[21]Joseph Banks, who accompanied James Cook on his first voyage to New Zealand in 1769, later recorded:
The War Song and dance consists of Various contortions of the limbs during which the tongue is frequently thrust out incredibly far and the orbits of the eyes enlarged so much that a circle of white is distinctly seen round the Iris: in short nothing is omitted which can render a human shape frightful and deformed, which I suppose they think terrible.[22]
From their arrival in the early 19th century, Christian missionaries tried to eradicate haka, along with other forms of Māori culture that they saw as conflicting with Christian beliefs and practice. Henry Williams, the leader of the Church Missionary Society mission in New Zealand, aimed to replace haka and traditional Māori chants (waiata) with hymns. Missionaries also encouraged European harmonic singing as part of the process of conversion.[21]
The use of haka in welcoming ceremonies for members of British royal family helped to improve its standing among Europeans. Prince Alfred, the Duke of Edinburgh, was the first royal to visit New Zealand, in 1869.[23] Upon the Duke's arrival at the wharf in Wellington, he was greeted by a vigorous haka. The Wellington Independent reported, "The excitement of the Maoris becomes uncontrollable. They gesticulate, they dance, they throw their weapons wildly in the air, while they yell like fiends let loose. But all this fierce yelling is of the most friendly character. They are bidding the Duke welcome."[24]
Modern haka
In modern times, various haka have been composed to be performed by women and even children. In some haka the men start the performance and women join in later.[5][25] Haka are performed for various reasons: for welcoming distinguished guests, or to acknowledge great achievements, occasions or funerals.
Some events have caused protests. The 1979 annual "haka party" parade at the University of Auckland – in which engineering students persisted in parodying haka by painting male genitals on their body and performing with sexually obscene gestures – was disrupted by a collection of Māori and Pacific Island students (He Taua, or The War Party) headed by Ngā Tamatoa, a prominent Māori activist group. For two decades people including Māori students at the university had asked the university and the engineering department to stop the tradition.[28][29] In 1979, the protesters included Hone Harawira, later a Member of Parliament.[30] Several of the engineering students were assaulted, and members of He Taua were arrested.[31] Their court case in Auckland sparked anti-racism protests outside the courthouse and was supported by a range of people including the president of the Auckland University Students Association.[32]
The choreographed dance and chant popularized around the world by the All Blacks derives from "Ka Mate",[33] a brief haka previously intended for extemporaneous, non-synchronized performance, whose composition is attributed to Te Rauparaha (1760s–1849), a war leader of the Ngāti Toa tribe.[34] The "Ka Mate" haka is classified as a haka taparahi – a ceremonial haka performed without weapons. "Ka Mate" is about the cunning ruse Te Rauparaha used to outwit his enemies, and may be interpreted as "a celebration of the triumph of life over death".[33] Concerns were expressed that the authorship and significance of this haka to the Ngāti Toa were being lost and that it had "become the most performed, the most maligned, the most abused of all haka",[35] and was now "the most globally recognised form of cultural appropriation".[11] Specific legal challenges regarding the rights of the Ngāti Toa to be acknowledged as the authors and owners of "Ka Mate" were eventually settled in a Deed of Settlement between Ngāti Toa and the New Zealand Government and New Zealand Rugby Union agreed in 2009 and signed in 2012.[36][37]
Spread to other Austronesian nation-states
The Malay College Kuala Kangsar, a historically all-boys all-Malay prestige boarding school in Malaysia adopted the haka for their own rugby team in admiration of the New Zealand All-Blacks' popularity in the 1970s under the tutelarship of Neil Jonathan Ryan.[38] In return, said college's cheer team developed their own cry in similar energy known as the bungwak.[39] Neighbouring Singapore's Rugby Union in 2004 took on an attempt of collaborating with students all over the island to create a "Singapore Roar" inspired by the haka, even though the majority of its demographic is Chinese.[40]
In Indonesia, a culture of doing the 'Haka-haka' or its more commonly known variation 'Yel-yel' exist and performed by groups such as military personnel, law enforcement, civil servants, students, and others.[41][42][43]
In the 21st century, kapa haka has been offered as a subject in universities, including the study of haka, and is practiced in schools and military institutions.[44]
In addition to the national Te Matatini ("many faces") festival,[8] local and regional competitions attract dozens of teams and thousands of spectators.[44]
The All Blacks' use of haka has become the most widely known, but several other New Zealand sports teams now perform haka before commencing a game. These include the national rugby league team ("the Kiwis"),[45] and the men's national basketball team ("Tall Blacks").[46] In the lead up to the Rugby World Cup in 2011, flashmob haka became a popular way of expressing support for the All Blacks. Some Māori leaders thought it was "inappropriate" and a "bastardisation" of haka.[47] Sizeable flashmob haka were performed in Wellington[48] and Auckland,[49] as well as London, which has a large New Zealander immigrant community.[50]
In November 2012, a Māori kapa haka group from Rotorua performed a version of the "Gangnam Style" dance mixed with a traditional haka in Seoul, celebrating 50 years of diplomatic relations between South Korea and New Zealand.[53]
Actor Jason Momoa performed a haka with a group of performers on the red carpet at the Aquaman premiere in Los Angeles in 2018.[57][58]
In March 2019, following the Christchurch mosque shootings, school pupils and other groups performed haka to honour those killed in the attacks.[59]
The choreography in the "Miroh" music video by South Korean boy band Stray Kids featured haka elements.[60]
Three or four American football teams are known to perform haka as a pregame rite. This appears to have begun at Kahuku High School where both the student body and local community includes many Polynesian Hawaiians, Māori, Samoans, Tahitians, and Tongans. The University of HawaiiRainbow Warriors football team also adopted haka as a pregame rite during the 2006 season,[61] and the practice has spread to a number of other teams overseas; there has, however, been some criticism of this as inappropriate and disrespectful.[62][63] Non-traditional or inaccurate haka performances have been criticised by Māori academics, such as Morgan Godfery.[13]
In September 2024, thousands gathered in Eden Park in Auckland to break the record of the largest haka performance. France held the previous official world record since 2014.[64]
^ ab"haka – Māori Dictionary". Te Aka Māori Dictionary. Retrieved 10 June 2021. ...vigorous dances with actions and rhythmically shouted words. A general term for several types of such dances.
Hisham Badrul Hashim (12 May 2017). "The team that could and inspired others: A Ryan's Legacy". Berita MCOBA. The Malay College Old Boys Association. Nicknamed 'All-Blacks' after the New Zealand national team for its all black strip, though the team only performed the own Haka before matches in the 80's (though it was believed that there was an attempt to create their own Haka by Joe Baker (C'66) which then turned to be the war cry 'Bung Wak' of the cheering squad that accompanied the team in matches).
Hisham Badrul Hashim (25 March 2020). "The origin of the Bungwak". ibid. Rugby was THE game in MCKK even then and the New Zealand All Blacks were everybody's favourite team, and their hakka [sic] was thus imitated. We had among us several rugby players and Joe Bake [sic] (Abu Bakar Awang Ngah) introduced the hakka [sic] idea for the rugby team. Khalid Hassan and Bahar Mansor took the initiative to 'compose' our version of the hakka [sic], producing the FFS War Cry for our team to perform before the start of the game and the supporters to do it from the stands.
^"Serma Asep Ciptakan 'Haka Haka' Khusus untuk HUT TNI" [Sergeant Major Asep Creates 'Haka Haka' Specially for TNI Anniversary]. detiknews (in Indonesian). Surabaya. 7 October 2014. Retrieved 20 November 2023. Itu haka haka yang kita lakukan tadi. Bukan yel yel, Itu yang dilakukan para pejuang Selandia Baru sebelum bertempur selalu melakukan haka haka agar musuh takut lebih dulu. [That's the haka haka we did earlier. Not yel-yel, that's what New Zealand fighters always do before fighting, so that the enemy is afraid first.]
^TNI, Puspen (24 April 2013), Atraksi Haka-Haka dari Wan TNI (Part 1) [Haka-Haka Attraction from TNI Women (Part 1)] (in Indonesian), National Monument, Jakarta, retrieved 20 November 2023{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Hokowhitu, Brendan (2014). Graham, Laura (ed.). Haka: Colonised Physicality, Body-Logic, and Embodied Sovereignty. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt1d9nmw6. ISBN978-0-8032-7415-0 – via Performing Indigeneity: Global Histories and Contemporary Experiences.
Hyland, Nicola (March 2015). "Beyoncé's Response (eh?): Feeling the Ihi of Spontaneous Haka Performance in Aotearoa/New Zealand". TDR/The Drama Review. 59 (1): 67–82. doi:10.1162/DRAM_a_00429. S2CID57567727.
Jackson, Steven J.; Hokowhitu, Brendan (2002). "Sport, Tribes, and Technology". Journal of Sport and Social Issues. 26 (2): 125–39. doi:10.1177/0193723502262002. S2CID144368028.
Kāretu, Tīmoti (1993a). Haka!: Te Tohu O Te Whenua Rangatira. Auckland: Reed. ISBN978-0-7900-0290-3.
Kāretu, Timoti (1993b). Haka: Dance of the Noble People. Auckland: Reed.
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