What is Tuku Wairua?

What is Tuku Wairua?

Tuku Wairua (Spirit-Leaving) When someone is near death, where there is no more hope and the person is trying to forestall death, this procedure is performed to help the spirit depart from the body lest the wairua become restless and wonder. Traditionally this was performed by the tohunga (priest).

What do you wear to a Māori funeral?

Funeral attendees wear black and sometimes kawakawa leaf wreaths on their heads. The Whanau pani, or close family of the deceased, aren’t expected to speak; but mourners can show the deceased respect by giving emotional speeches, sharing memories, performing songs, and doing chants.

Why is Tangihanga so important?

The tangihanga is the enduring Māori ceremony for mourning someone who has died. It is commonly called a tangi, which also means to weep, and to sing a dirge (a lament for the dead). The dead play an important role in Māori traditions.

What is kawe mate?

Kawe mate means “carrying the dead.” This tikanga takes place after the death of a loved one. It invokes her or his memory, with a representation of that person as a potent visual symbol.

What is the difference between Wairua and Mauri?

Wairua is present within the whole process, while mauri is the point of life where those elements move, fuse and create. Mauri birthed energy, conscious and unconscious thought, time, space, shape, form.

Why do Māori wash their hands when leaving a cemetery?

Different cultures Māori consider that urupā (burial grounds) or cemeteries are tapu (sacred) and that tapu is removed by washing hands on departure.

What is a kawe?

Kawe mate means “carrying the dead.” This tikanga takes place after the death of a loved one. It invokes her or his memory, with a representation of that person as a potent visual symbol. This is usually a photograph or portrait.

What to say in Māori if someone dies?

They know not decay or death, they live for ever; they are unlike the people of this world; man is born but to be caught in the snare of Hine.” So it is that, when a person dies, an old saying of the Maori folk is quoted: “Me tangi, kāpā ko te mate i te marama” (Let us mourn and weep for him, for truly he dieth not as …

What is a waka kawe?

Harakeke casket, otherwise called a waka kawe or waka tupapaku, is a new offering whānau can chose to have their loved ones buried in. Simplicity Bereavement Services in Hastings is able to offer the waka kawe for whānau who want a more environmentally friendly option.

What is whānau pani?

The role of the whānau pani (or kiri mate, or kura tūohu – the bereaved family) is to mourn. Grieving takes many forms and in traditional times this included haehae (laceration of the body) with shells or obsidian, or even whakamomori (suicide).

Where do Māori go after death?

Māori history and legend It is here that after death, all Māori spirits travel up the coast and over the wind-swept vista to the pohutukawa tree on the headland of Te Rerenga Wairua. They descend into the underworld (reinga) by sliding down a root into the sea below.

What does whānau pani mean?

the bereaved family
The role of the whānau pani (or kiri mate, or kura tūohu – the bereaved family) is to mourn. Grieving takes many forms and in traditional times this included haehae (laceration of the body) with shells or obsidian, or even whakamomori (suicide).

What is kiri mate?

What do you say in Māori when someone dies?

The Maori terms a natural death mate aitu, and mate tara whare (death by the house wall).

What’s the meaning of moe mai ra?

moe mai ra moe mai ra. Sleep well the esteemed chief Michael with your wife and friend for life, sleep well in the heart of our Lord, you will never be forgotten, we shed.

  • October 30, 2022