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… He identified the relationship between Māori and Pākehā in New Zealand as one of cultural symbiosis, with two …
Type: Biography
… Māori, Pacific and Asian women had lower rates than Pākehā women. If women did not breastfeed, infant formula …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Pregnancy, birth and baby care
… seek a decisive victory. Throughout the war the civilian Pākehā population was besieged in the provincial capital. …
Type: Biography
… a type of community-based policing emerged, at least among Pākehā. Māori were increasingly marginalised in all areas of …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Police
… of her turbulent times, when tribal wars were fought and Pākehā began settling in their land – when 'The patu has …
Type: Biography
… people did not have a community services card. Eligible Pākehā were more likely to have one than other ethnic …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Primary health care
… known as Te Whānau-ā-Tāpihana. Enid was one of the few Pākehā women in the area. Rejected at first, she soon won …
Type: Biography
… the ransoms he had paid for the release of Māori and Pākehā captives over the years. He acquired both Whakaari …
Type: Biography
… Ōkurukuru and Kai Iwi. This agreement was referred to by Pākehā as a 'land league'. About the same time as the …
Type: Biography
… King in 1894. Pātara Te Tuhi was admired by both Māori and Pākehā for his shrewdness and his good nature. John Gorst, …
Type: Biography
… (1973), and Craig Harrison’s vision of latter day Māori–Pākehā armed conflict, Tomorrow will b e a lovely day …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Plays and playwrights
… reach the Whanganui River. It was used by a number of early Pākehā travellers. The Kaharoa track from Pātea went …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Taranaki region
… Tūwharetoa, a tohunga, writer and important informant for Pākehā ethnologists, especially Elsdon Best . His mother was …
Type: Biography
… arose over the leasing of mudflats at Whakarapa to a Pākehā farmer, Bob Holland. He and his sons began to drain … a Waitangi Day pageant at Carlaw Park to educate Māori and Pākehā about the significance of the treaty. In the late … retain their land and culture, and to galvanise Māori and Pākehā support. Thus was born the Māori land march, which …
Type: Biography
… and Hogben he was convinced that Māori were the equal of Pākehā in their natural abilities and that the education …
Type: Biography
… and parental support as soon as they begin earning. Pākehā parents who can afford it might help their adult …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Midlife adults
… He increasingly found himself caught between Māori and Pākehā over issues of land and sovereignty. Bishop Selwyn …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Anglican Church
… identified with particular religious traditions. While Pākehā women and children were often excluded from funerals …
Type: Story Page
Part of story: Death and dying
… baptised in Sydney on 25 December 1831. He was the first Pākehā child to be born in the South Island. Jacky Guard …
Type: Biography
… and volcanoes. He is thought to have been the first Pakeha to climb to the crater of Mt Ruapehu, and the Ruapehu …
Type: Biography