- Avaiki
Avaiki is one of the many entities by which the people of Polynesia refer to their ancestral and spiritual homelands.
amoa, Hawaii, Cook Islands
By no means certain, but certainly possible, is an origin in the large islands of
Samoa , namelySavaii . Variants include, in order of migration,Havaii , the old name forRaiatea inFrench Polynesia ; the far better knownHawaii in theUnited States , Avaiki in theCook Islands andNiue andHawaiki inAotearoa ,New Zealand .There are endless local variants. In the Cook Islands, for example, on the capital island of
Rarotonga , northern facing volcanic rocks, tumbling onto the shore millennia ago and still set in place, are well known as the ancient departure point for souls bound for Avaiki - the afterworld or heaven.In fact each island, "vaka" or "ngati" (family line) has its own Avaiki or interpretation of it. For instance it would be somewhere in the
manu'a islands group (American Samoa) for the Ngati Karika (Te au o Tonga tribe - Rarotonga) ["Ko te papa ariki teia mei Avaiki mai, mei roto ia papa" Genealogies and Historical Notes from Rarotonga, Part 1. Journal of the Polynesian Society vol 1. p. 64-75, 1892 ] . For the Ngati Tangi'ia (Takitumu tribe-Rarotonga), it would be atTahiti . Others locate Avaiki atRaiatea ...Mythology
In the mythology of
Mangaia (Cook Islands), Avaiki is the "underworld " or "netherworld". It is described like a hollow of a vast coconut shell.Varima-te-takere , the mother ofVatea , lives in the lowest depths of the interior of this coconut shell (Tregear 1891:392) [E.R. Tregear, "Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary" (Lyon and Blair: Lambton Quay), 1891.] . Nevertheless the famous maori anthropologistTe Rangi Hiroa (Peter Buck), gives a less mystical interpretation of this mangaian Avaiki. According to him, "when Tangi'ia came to Rarotonga from Tahiti, he brought with him some rankless "manahune" [Commoners inTahitian ] (...) As they had no chance of rising in social status, some of them under the leadership of Rangi migrated to Mangaia to start a new life (c.1450-1475). Their antagonism toward Rarotonga made them conceal the land of origin and invent an origin from a spiritual homeland in the netherworld of Avaiki" [Peter Buck, "Mangaian Society" in "Bulletin of the Bishop Museum", Honolulu, 1934.]olomon Islands Connection
"see
Rennell Island "While
Solomon Islands is mostly considered Melanesia, the province ofRennell and Bellona is considered Polynesian. The province consists ofRennell Island ,Bellona Island and the uninhabitedIndispensable Reefs .The locals call Rennell Island “MUNGAVA” and they call Bellona Island “MUNGIKI”. They then combine the last three letters of each Island and come up with a word called AVAIKI. If someone local does something silly you might hear someone say ‘"That’s the Avaiki way"’. A further example of this nomenclature can also be evidenced with the identification of the name of the Province, Renbel which combines Rennell and Bellona. MV Renbel is also the name of the ferry that supplies the province from
Honiara .There is also a Rugby and Netball team on Rennell Island called Avaiki.
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