POTIKI TUAKANA TAONGA
“So long as kaumatua held the tensions
between tohunga, tuakana and potiki in balance, the wellbeing of hapu remained
robust.” Haare Williams speaking this week at Kaiaua, Firth of Thames.
Pa transformed the landscape into visible
expressions of mana o te whenua by
building impressive palisades and gateways. While these fortresses were great
feats of earth-carved works of engineering, art and sculptures, they stood out
as practical statements of strength and manifestations of mana over the land. These represented unity, strength, infinity
and spirituality (holiness) and social interactions. Maungakiekie is an example
of tribal dominance over Auckland.
Three domains of protection:
(1) The domain of nga atua, the gods of te
whare wananga o Tane, atua (deities) were accessed by tohunga ahurewa (high
priest) via tuahu (sacred altar) and asked to provide kin group with bountiful
harvests, safety, knowledge, spirituality and empowering wisdom
(2) The domain of marae-atea is where the
complimentary, but different manifestations of tapu/noa, war/peace, host/visitor,
male/female, senior/junior were skilfully woven and held together by kaumatua
(3) The third domain of taonga
representing the wairua of key ancestors, enabling rangatira during life crises
to bind together the kin group as a singularly powerful entity, taonga is also
an emblem of peace and trust
Rangatira (chief) possessing chiefly
status, was imbued with mana and the authority conferred by the people, capable
of making final decisions, power over life and death, a community worked to
maintain the mana of the rangatira (chief) and hence mana of hapu
Tohunga (priestly leader, specialist
and scholar) is a level of leadership within the tribe with access to atua
(deities), a person regarded with awe and circumspection
Tuakana is the first born of the chief
the natural heir to the position of rangatira as senior of a set of siblings,
has to be protective the position, younger siblings become a threat; potiki on
the other hand is not hampered by sibling tensions (refer to Maui, the last
born of Taranga).
Potiki is the entrepreneurially-minded
class of Maori leader allowed to be on the ‘wild side’, ‘wilfully naughty’, and
as ‘haututu’ such a child was looked on as potential leaders. They were often brought up by grandparents.
Kaumatua held heritage and change in
balance. Potiki challenged heritage and
sought change through feats of courage and rascality. While kaumatua represented
heritage ways through the provision of customary tikanga (stability), upcoming
potiki carried a propensity to challenge older siblings, parents or even elders.
Tribal narratives are littered with stories of adventurous potiki who
attempting to prove worthy of leadership, met a similar fate as Maui; the cost
of life in the pursuit of immortality.
So long as the kaumatua held the
tensions between tohunga, tuakana and potiki in balance, the wellbeing of hapu
(kin group) remained robust.
Only through the marae forum of
leadership (tangata whenua or ahi ka) could manuhiri (outsiders or visitors) gain
legitimated access to tribal resources.
To attempt otherwise was to transgress boundaries and therefore provoke a
crisis.
But that is exactly what poitiki class
of Maori leaders would do; challenge the boundaries of heritage and authority
or the conservatism in their eagerness to explore new opportunities. More often than not, a life-crisis would
erupt, challenging the checks and balances of heritage versus opportunity.
When the dust of war settled, it is on
the marae that kaumatua again negotiated peace through tuku rangatira (gifting
land rights), taumau (marriage alliances), moko taura (child adoption) and
presentations of taonga (tribal heirlooms) beyond the tribe. Boundaries are reaffirmed and taonga travel
through the generations as solemn symbols of peace and trust. (eg Wiremu
Tamihana Tarapipipi Te Waharoa personal mere to Cameron).
It is during the tangihanga that the
power of taonga becomes apparent.
Appropriately used, taonga assisted in ameliorating tribal tensions and
the obligations being experienced by loss.
Taonga act as here (binding
together) collapsing time so the ancestors they represent can be present guiding
the wairua in its return to spiritual homelands.
A note about the most celebrated
potiki of all.
Maui is
potiki the last born of Makea Tutara and Taranga. He was potiki the youngest of
a set of siblings, a trickster hero found in all myths. While the Greeks
alluded to Homer, so it is with Maui a central and formative element in Maori
and Pasifika cultures. These narratives bring out the search for immortal life,
the distaste for incest, respect for elders and the recognition that sexual
intercourse is a prerequisite for new life.
The conflict between the individual and group is brought out when he
challenges the authority of elders. Because he is potiki, he is given
freedom. He is the representative free
male and through him we are shown tikanga
(the right way to do things). The belief
in mana is brought out in the rituals. It is Maui who rises up against
overwhelming odds by ‘breaking’ the rules.
Maui potiki introduces the theme that trickery and deceit are acceptable
if desired social goals are achieved. He
is also the benefactor of all human kind.
In Te Ika a Maui, he outwits his older brothers who could not overcome
their greed for land. Maui’s final encounter with Hinenui Te Po was foretold, so
the story justifies the Maori predictive powers of omens, prophecies and
dreams. His encounter with Hinenui Te Po
provides a rationale for death the ultimate penalty, a warning for going too
far.
The platform
is there for junior children to step up provided they show intelligence, wit, boldness
and cunning determination they too could rise and become rangatira.
Our world, for a start anyway can be seen through a prism of two worlds;
Te Ao Maori, and Te Ao Pakeha, our two worlds in unity - Nga Ao E Rua.
Haare Williams
Kaiaua 28 September 2014
Vocabulary
Haututu – wilfully naughty, inventive,
creative
Hinenui Te Po – guardian of the
spirits, death
Kaumatua – elderly male and female
Pakeha -denotes non-Maori, of European ancestry, a New
Zealander
Maori - from
tangata maori, ordinary, common people
Taonga – living treasures
Tauiwi – ‘just landed or recently
landed’, also means ‘visitor’
Tikanga – doing what is right, the
opposite is he (wrong doing)
Ihi – power, possibility,
potentiality, spine tingling,
Wehi – fearfulness, awe, reverence
Wana – artistry (as in haka)
Mana – personal chiefly charisma,
integrity, authority, trust
Wairua - living spirit, sacredness of
life in all things