Haka are a variety of ceremonial dances in Māori culture. A performance art, haka are often performed by a group, with vigorous movements and stamping of the feet with rhythmically shouted accompaniment. Haka have been traditionally performed by both men and women for a variety of social functions within Māori culture. They are performed to welcome distinguished guests, or to acknowledge great achievements, occasions, or funerals.

Kapa haka groups are common in schools. The main Māori performing arts competition, Te Matatini, takes place every two years.

New Zealand sports teams’ practice of performing a haka to challenge opponents before international matches has made the dance form more widely known around the world. This tradition began with the 1888–89 New Zealand Native football team tour and has been carried on by the New Zealand rugby union team (known as the All Blacks) since 1905. Although popularly associated with the traditional battle preparations of male warriors, conceptions that haka are typically war dances, and the inaccurate performance of haka by non-Māori, are considered erroneous by Māori scholars.

Etymology

The group of people performing a haka is referred to as a kapa haka (kapa meaning group or team, and also rank or row). 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-Polynesian saka, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian sakaŋ, meaning ‘bowlegged’.

History and practice

According to Māori scholar Tīmoti Kāretu, haka have been “erroneously defined by generations of uninformed as ‘war dances’”, while Māori mythology places haka as a dance “about the celebration of life”. Following 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. 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’”

War haka (peruperu) were originally performed by warriors before a battle, proclaiming their strength and prowess in order to intimidate the enemy. Various actions are employed in the course of a performance, including facial contortions such as showing the whites of the eyes (pūkana), and poking out the tongue (whetero, performed by men only)

18th and 19th centuries

The earliest Europeans to witness haka described them as being “vigorous” and “ferocious”. From their arrival in the early 19th century, Christian missionaries tried unsuccessfully to eradicate haka, along with other forms of Māori culture that they saw as conflicting with Christian beliefs and practice.

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. Haka are performed for various reasons: for welcoming distinguished guests, or to acknowledge great achievements, occasions or funerals.

The 1888–89 New Zealand Native football team began a tradition by performing haka during an international tour. The common use of haka by the national rugby union team before matches, beginning with The Original All Blacks in 1905, has made one type of haka familiar.

The choreographed dance and chant popularized around the world by the All Blacks derives from “Ka Mate”, 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. 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”.

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.

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  • GaveUp [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    shoutouts to that one therapist who asked me if I knew what the phrase “don’t throw stones in a glass house” meant after I told him I feel like I’m losing my mind because I’m constantly surrounded by morons

    Yessir it’s totally me being insecure about my intelligence and not the average American being a gullible dumbass being led into fascism, no sir

  • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    2 hours ago

    I need friends, I need to come to grips with whatever blend of neurospiciness has been wrecking my shit my whole life, I need therapy, I need to live in a society and have something useful and fulfilling to do so I don’t just get high and doom spiral about the state of the world and how I’m a disappointment to my parents

    I wish it didn’t take a stupid sad blideo gaem story to break through the wall of caked-on whatever the fuck that separates me from emotional vulnerability at all other times. It’s made me lonely to not be able to be open, and even typing this right now there’s like a third of my brain telling me that this is a stupid embarassment. Crying, or trying to cry, is maddening. It’s shockingly close to the surface almost all the time these days, but when I want to let it out I can’t do it, like a sneeze that never comes. At this point my brain is just screaming delet this so I guess I should hit post.

    The sad blideo gaem is While We Wait Here, by the way. Not a masterpiece but definitely the best I’ve ever seen anyone pull off the Playstation revival genre

  • Kolibri [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    just rambling about stuff, like my dad or slight mental health stuff cw: alcoholism

    I am very sleep deprived right now and feeling sick. Again. I dunno how many times I have experienced this feeling due to not sleeping much at times. Just sort of thinking about like, this moment right now. Bunch of lights on late at night that feel overbearing sometimes, in my room, the living room that illuminates the hallway to my room. Then there the noise, with the TV on loud because my dad passed out on his chair again while watching TV, where he doesn’t like to be waken up when he passed out on the couch. My nose and mouth dry, a slight headache. A general sick feeling, while a sort of feeling “out of it”. A burning feeling in my face. Then there my dog’s ashes to my desk on the right. And then me occasionally checking in on my dad to make sure he not dead due to him drinking a lot, which he isn’t. How many times have I checked on him? Too much to count at this point.

    Then there just this feeling of, something very unhealthy about this environment when looking around. Nights as an escape become lesser, as day and night blur. My dad struggling in his own way with his drinking, and me struggling in another way. Drowning.

    I think what I hate the most is I don’t want to experience moments like this anymore. Feeling exhausted, tired, and seeing my dad passed out again, and hardly much quiet or peace of the night. A constant rhythm that keeps on going. I would go rest right now, but I can’t. At least until I get that “sense” of nightly peace. Which only comes after my dad finally wakes up from his chair and decides to go to bed, in which also tells me still okay. Then the quiet of night comes, the loud sound of the TV goes away, the sickly overburdening artificial lights turn off and the night is mine just for a brief moment, and then I can sleep. One day this will end and it won’t be like this forever.

  • Coolkidbozzy [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 hours ago

    Despite what I said last time, the past 2 days of hanging out with my crush have led me to conclude that I should NOT confess feelings for her tomorrow. She needs to move past her ex, who continues to contact her and cause her pain. We have chemistry, but it wouldn’t be productive to ask her out now. Perhaps I wait until I take her as my date to a prom-themed party next month …

    The wait is going to drive me insane, but hanging out with her in the meantime will be fun regardless. Gotta quickly figure out a promposal next week

    Completely unrelated, but why do people make turkey so dry? I roasted one for the first time today, and it was better than every turkey my family has ever had for thanksgiving. I have such a ridiculous amount of leftovers also 🤤

  • Coca_Cola_but_Commie [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    6 hours ago

    https://xcancel.com/NickTagliaferro/status/1857814774437843046

    What do you make of this? Not the entire thing, obviously this is all lib nonsense. But specifically the idea that Harris’s platform was, from a lib’s point of view, redistributive. I haven’t read the campaign’s released economic policy position and I would rather gouge my own eyes out than do so, but all the stuff I remember being talked about was like “if you operate a binder clip wholesaler in a low-income rural area for forty years you may qualify for a tax credit. If you are a single mother making less than $20,000 a year in the district of Williamshire, Ohio you may qualify for a tax credit. Collect fifty tax credits to be eligible to win a commemorative IRS plate.” I can’t imagine an argument where an offer to let working class people pay less on their taxes is meaningfully redistributive in any sense of the word. If you let them keep that money and pay for it by ratcheting up the corporate tax rate, maybe then.

  • hexaflexagonbear [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 hours ago

    one thing we’ve all forgotten during the trump era is just how much republicans focus group everything they say. Like the “military aged” part of this is complete nonsense, until you remember their whole thing is to run focus groups to see which phrases get people the most worked up. It’s such a deranged party, and they’re essentially built on the social media algorithm logic of A/B testing and figuring out what makes people the angriest. No wonder they’ve completely taken over facebook.