Whaitiri

Whaitiri

. Whaitiri is the granddaughter of Te Kanapu, and the great-granddaughter of Te Uira, both of whom are personified forms of lightning (Reed 1963:158).

Marries Kaitangata

Whaitiri is a fearsome figure, fond of cannabalism. When she hears of a mortal named Kaitangata (man-eater), she is certain he will make a fine husband for her. She comes down to earth and marries him, but is disappointed to learn that he is a gentle person, nothing like his name suggests. Whaitiri kills her favourite slave, Anonokia, takes out her heart and liver, and offers them to Kaitangata as a sign of her affection. He is horrified at the grisly offering (Reed 1963:158-159).

Kaitangata is a hard worker, spending a lot of time fishing to feed his family. Unfortunately, he has never learned how to make hooks with a barb, and so most of his fish escape. Whaitiri gives him a barbed hook, and he catches a groper, which she offers to the gods. Whaitiri quickly tires of a diet of fish, so when her husband is away fishing, she takes a net and catches two of her husband's relatives, Tupeke-ti and Tupeke-ta. When Kaitangata returns, she asks him to perform the incantations that are used when human flesh is offered to the gods. He does not know the chants, so she tries to perform them herself, not willing to confess that she is ignorant of the correct words to use. She mumbles nonsense words, before cooking the bodies, cutting them up and gorging herself on the flesh, to the disgust of the villagers. Only the bones are left (Reed 1963:158-9).

Later, Kaitangata uses the bones to make barbed hooks, and goes fishing. He catches groper, and gives them to Whaitiri. He does not tell her that he used hooks made from the bones of Tupeke-ti and Tupeke-ta. She eats the fish, and because the fish is infused with the "tapu" (sacredness) from the bodies of the two men, Whaitiri gradually begins to go blind. At first she is mystified at the reason for this, but eventually she is visited by a woman from the underworld who tells her what has happened (Reed 1963:159).

Returns to the sky

One day, Whaitiri overhears her husband describe her to two strangers. She is offended when she hears him say that his wife's skin is like the wind, and her heart is as cold as snow. On another occasion, she is ashamed when Kaitangata complains that their children are dirty. She explains to her husband that she is unable to wash her children because she is a sacred being from the heavens, and she tells him for the first time that her name is thunder. She prepares to return to her true home in the heavens, and foretells that her children will follow her one day. She departs in a cloud, leaving her children, one of whom is Hemā (Reed 1963:159-160).

Found by her grandsons

This is fulfilled when Tāwhaki and Karihi, Hemā's sons, set off to climb up to the sky. At the foot of the ascent they find their grandmother, Whaitiri, now blind, who sits continually counting the tubers of sweet potato or taro that are her only food. The brothers tease her by snatching them away, one by one, and upsetting her count. Eventually, they reveal themselves to her and restore her sight. In return, she gives them advice about how best to make the climb into the sky. Karihi tries first, but makes the error of climbing up the "aka taepa", or hanging vine. He is blown violently around by the winds of heaven, and falls to his death. Tāwhaki climbs by the "aka matua", or parent vine, recites the right incantations, and reaches the highest of the 10 heavens. There he learns many spells from Tama-i-waho, and marries a woman named Hāpai, or as others say, Maikuku-makaka. They have a son, and according to some versions of the story it is this child who is named Wahieroa (Biggs 1966:450).

Names and epithets

*Waitiri (thunder, thundering water, dialectal)
*Whatitiri (thunder)
*Whaitiri-mātakataka (crashing thunder)
*Waitiri Station, a large Central Otago New Zealand high country ranch. Named after the thundering waters of the Kawarau River. Waitiri Station is the major ranch of the Kawarau Gorge and runs from the Bungy Bridge to the Roaring Meg on SH6. It is a merino sheep station and is run in conjunction with Eastburn Station.

ee also

*Matakerepō

References

*B.G. Biggs, 'Maori Myths and Traditions' in A.H. McLintock (editor), "Encyclopaedia of New Zealand", 3 Volumes. (Government Printer: Wellington), 1966, II:447-454.
*A.W. Reed, "Treasury of Maori Folklore" (A.H. & A.W. Reed:Wellington), 1963.

A Cook 'The Gibbston Story'


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Whaitiri —    A cannibal chieftainess who descended from the sky in Maori mythology …   Who’s Who in non-classical mythology

  • Tāwhaki — While he has some god like attributes, in the legends he is described as a man from this world (Paraone 1850).GenealogyThe genealogy of Tāwhaki varies somewhat in different accounts. In general, Tāwhaki is a grandson of Whaitiri, a cannibalistic… …   Wikipedia

  • Matakerepō — Matakerepō, in a Māori story of the Arawa tribe of Rotorua, is a female ancestor of the hero Tāwhaki. She is an example of the female helper , a recurrent element in Polynesian myth and legend, who assists Tāwhaki to attain his quest of finding… …   Wikipedia

  • Kaitangata (mythology) — In Māori mythology, Kaitangata is a mortal son of Maui and an industrious man who married the female supernatural being Whaitiri. Due to his name; Kaitangata means man eater; Whaitiri believed him to be a cannibal as she was however this proved… …   Wikipedia

  • Tongahiti — is one of Tāwhaki s enemies in a Māori tradition which White (1887 1891) attributes to the Ngati Hau iwi. In this tale, Tāwhaki blocks up all the chinks in the house of his enemies, a house of which his grandmother Whaitiri is the doorkeeper.… …   Wikipedia

  • Te Uira — For other uses, see Uira (disambiguation) In Māori mythology, Te Uira is a personification of lightning and a great grandparent of Whaitiri (Reed 1963:158). Te Uira s child Te Kanapu, grandparent of Whaitiri, is also a personification of… …   Wikipedia

  • Hemā (mythology) — Māori= In Māori mythology, hema is a son of Whaitiri and Kaitangata and the father of Tāwhaki and Karihi. [The names of his wives and children vary in Māori accounts. Some versions name his wife as Urutonga. However in a Ngati Porou legend , Hemā …   Wikipedia

  • Kauraka Kauraka — (1951 1997) was a Cook Islands writer. He was born in Rarotonga, the main island of the Cooks. Kauraka studied in New Zealand, Fiji and other countries. He published six collections of poems in the English and Rarotongan languages. When Kauraka… …   Wikipedia

  • Whitehead (bird) — Whitehead Conservation status Least Concern ( …   Wikipedia

  • Rua Kenana Hepetipa — Rua Tapunui Kenana (1869–1937) was a Māori prophet, faith healer and land rights activist.BackgroundEarly in 1906 the New Zealand newspapers began to notice a new Māori activist prophet, Rua Kenana. He caught their attention by his claims to… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”