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Students from Punchbowl Boys High School perform the New Zealand Maori tradition dance called a haka after Friday prayers at Imam Ali bin Abi Taleb Mosque in Sydney, Australia, Friday, March 22 ...
When New Zealand kicked off the Women's World Cup opener against Norway last week, just three of the 23 Football Ferns traced their roots to the Indigenous Maori people.
An inquiry found abuse, torture and neglect of some 200,000 people in state care over 70 years. People with disabilities or from Maori and Pacific Islander communities were especially vulnerable.
Rodney Hide is an anti-theist. He just doesn't believe in God. He is pleased there isn't one.
At the ceremony, a spiritual leader from a north Maori tribe walked around the huge canoe saying mysterious Maori prayers, "injecting energy" to the canoe, and "releasing" the canoe from the god ...
Ranui embeds Maori culture by using words from the language in her coaching and leading Karakia, a type of Maori prayer, after matches.
Students from Punchbowl Boys High School perform the New Zealand Maori tradition dance called a haka after Friday prayers at Imam Ali bin Abi Taleb Mosque in Sydney, Australia, Friday, March 22, 2019.
When New Zealand kicked off the Women’s World Cup opener against Norway last week, just three of the 23 Football Ferns traced their roots to the Indigenous Maori people.
White and Maori, Catholic and Muslim, they stood and performed a haka that held a particularly poignant meaning: It is the haka used by Cashmere High School, which lost two students in the attack.
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