The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

OCEANIA 319


War canoes, or waka tua, are still
used in Maori ceremonies. At the
annual IRONMAN race in New
Zealand, waka escort competitors
to the start of the swimming leg.

See also: Creation of the universe 130–33 ■ Ahura Mazda and Ahriman 198–99 ■ Brahma creates the cosmos 200 ■
Izanagi and Izanami 220–21

Hine-titama was raised not
knowing who her father was.
When she grew up, Tane married
her. Hine-titama lived happily as
Tane’s wife, and had children with
him, until she found out that he
was actually her father. Appalled,
she fled to the underworld. Her
father followed her and begged her
to return, but Hine-titama refused.
She told him that he should stay
where he was to look after his
children in the world of light.

Hine-titama chose to remain in
the underworld to care for those
who entered the world of darkness.
There she took on a new name,
Hine-nui-te-po, meaning “great
maiden of the darkness.”
No humans had entered the
underworld until the actions of the
trickster Maui, who had been told
that anyone who crawled through
Hine-nui-te-po’s body would banish
death from humanity. While the
goddess slept, Maui turned into a
worm and tried to enter her body
through her vagina. When Hine-
nui-te-po realized this, she quickly
shut her legs, crushing Maui to
death. From then on, humanity was
forever doomed to be mortal. ■

The war god Tu


Of all the sons of Rangi
and Papa, only Tu withstood
the attack from the storm
god, Tawhirimatea: Tane
could do nothing to stop
his trees being destroyed,
Tangaroa fled to the ocean,
and Haumia and Rongo hid
themselves in their mother’s
body, the Earth.
After the winds had died
down, Tu blamed his brothers
for not supporting him and
attacked them. He cut down
trees in Tane’s forests, caught
fish from Tangaroa’s water,
and dug up the plants from
the soil where Haumia and
Rongo had hidden.
Tu’s actions supplied
humans with a template for
making use of the resources
of the natural world through
ritual and farming. Tu also set
a precedent for war between
humans by fighting with his
brothers. The Maori name for
New Zealand’s armed forces
is Ngati Tumatauenga,
meaning “Tribe of the God
of War,” in honor of Tu.

Rangi Papa

Tu Tawhirimatea Tangaroa Rongo Haumia

Tane Hine-titama

The Maori people can trace their genealogy back to
sky father Rangi and earth mother Papa, and their sons,
as well as the waka (“canoe”) in which their ancestors
traveled to New Zealand over 800 years ago.

US_318-319_Tane.indd 319 01/12/17 4:23 pm

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