The
Haka is a traditional dance of the Maori people of New Zealand. It has roots
back to the beginning of Maori culture and is deeply embedded in their
mythology. As such it is a very important aspect of the Maori identity, and to
this day it is used in many facets of Maori life. Some argue that the Haka has
been bastardized and hijacked by the modern sports world, particularly with
high-impact sports such as rugby and American football, but despite its vault
into fame on the modern field of “battle”, the Haka remains as a powerful
expression of Maori identity and a cross-cultural display of masculinity and
strength.
The Haka: Ancient Maori War Dance; Modern Sports Anomaly
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Maori Tradition
The
Maori people are a proud race of sea-faring Polynesians, indigenous to the
island of New Zealand. It is estimated that the Maori’ ancestors arrived in
what is now the home around the year 925 BC. Over the course of a millennium
and then some, the Maori people have developed a rich culture and a proud
heritage, one that they are devoted to preserving and passing on to the next
generation. Dance is a very important aspect of Maori culture, and has been for
many hundreds of years. Dances such as the Waiata-a-ringa and the Poi are parts
of the kappa haka, meaning, Maori performing arts, used to display ability and
tell stories. There is one important distinction to make. Haka is the Maori
word for dance, and hakas are used in every aspct of Maori culture and on many
occasions. The Waiata-a-ringa and the Poi are hakas, but the Haka is a dance of its own.
Haka as
the whole body of Maori dance is steeped in Maori legend. The sun god
Tama-nui-te-ra and one of his wives, Hine-raumati, who embodies the essence of
summer, had a son named Tane-rore. In the summertime, the shimmering appearance
of the air on a hot summer day is said to be Tane-rore dancing for his mother.
Haka is a recreation of that dancing to please the gods, and the light rapid
movement fundamental to haka is meant to represent Tane-rore’s dance. Haka
performers will even tremble their hands at times, trying to mimic the
shimmering of summer air. There are many different hakas for all occasions,
from birthdays to weddings to funerals, and many other celebratory events. One
of the traditional applications of haka was a ritual of greeting when two
parties met. From this tradition of meeting another tribe with dance arose the
Haka, the aggressive and challenging dance and war-cry employed when meeting
enemies for battle.
A Warrior's Aesthetic
The Haka
itself is a challenge and a war cry, born of a people divided into many tribes
and constantly on the edge of battle. It is used as an expression of aggression
or anger, and as an assertion of dominance over an opponent. It can be
performed by both men and women, though the modern understanding of the Haka
has been greatly influenced by the sports world where we see it as a male-only
dance. In a traditional Haka, the men stand in front with the women behind. The
Haka is a pan-sensational experience, with loud vocals and rhythmic
declamation, and aggressive and challenging facial expressions, body movements,
and overall demeanor. The men attempt to appear as menacing and threatening as
possible, and employ foot-stamping and body percussion to evoke fear in their
adversaries. The dancers are very grounded and percussive with their movement,
and the only audio accompaniment is the sounds made by the dancers themselves.
(And hopefully the whimpers of their enemies!) While seen as a traditional war
dance, the Haka had many uses beyond the battlefield in pre-colonial Maori
society and continues to do so today.
The Haka in Sports
In
modern culture, the Haka as a war-cry has been adopted by the war-like
competitors of the world’s most physical sports. Since 1988, the New Zealand
national rugby team, the All Blacks, has performed the Haka, Ka mate Ka mate, before its rugby
matches. This display of national pride and outright aggression has impressed
many throughout the years, and undoubtedly struck fear into the hearts of
opponents. Because of its popularity and rise to fame on the field of
competitive sports, the Haka has come to be a major part of contact sports.
Many rugby teams around the world have their own Hakas, from the literal
descendants of the Maori people to the Highland rugby team of Northern Utah.
American football teams have picked up on this empowering tradition, and teams
such as the University of Hawaii and Brigham Young University and known to
perform a Haka before games. Even basketball teams are getting into the craze
of the Haka, with a performance by the New Zealand basketball team when playing
against the United States at the 2014 FIBA tournament.
Translation:
’Tis death! ‘tis death! (or: I may die) ’Tis life! ‘tis life! (or: I may live)
’Tis death! ‘tis death! ’Tis life! ‘tis life!
This is the hairy man
Who brought the sun and caused it to shine
A step upward, another step upward!
A step upward, another... the Sun shines!
The Haka is Changing
This
worldwide, limelight exposure has many feeling that the Haka is losing its
meaning, and many Maori elders despise what they feel is the bastardization of
a powerful Maori tradition. In a recent article published by the British news
publication, The Telegraph, Oliver
Brown, their chief sports feature writer argues that “All Black’s Haka is, for
all its vibrancy as a spectacle, scarcely more than a circus display these
days.” He sights the recent performance of the Haka by the New Zealand
basketball team as a prime example of how the Haka has lost its potency and
meaning to the beholder. According to Brown, the reaction of the United States
basketball team “spoke not of quavering fear, or steely ‘let’s see what you’ve
got’ defiance, but utter befuddlement.” Brown argues that the challenge of the
Haka has inextricably tied with it the right of those being challenged to
reply. The modern sports world begs to differ, with the International Rugby
Board having protocols in place that keep an opposing team from coming closer
than ten meters from the performance of the Haka, wih stiff fines in place for
those who encroach. Brown states, “The Haka, sadly, is hidebound by political
correctness.”
I agree
with Oliver Brown. To an extent. It is true that the modern Haka has been
changed and transformed by the rules and regulations sanctioned by officials
trying to keep the peace before a contest even begins. As unfortunate as it is,
the modern Haka simply cannot be the challenge it once was, for a challenge
with no reply is no challenge at all. The response and physicality that the
Haka was meant to evoke in its beholders is one that we are afraid of as a
society, and one that we do not want to see. The docile man of the 21st
century is afraid and astonished to feel the animalistic instincts of war and
the desire to conquer an enemy well up within his own breast.
The Haka of Today
It
is my opinion that the Haka of 2015 has transformed itself to be a personal
experience. No longer is it about defiance against an opponent. No more is the
Haka used to frighten the enemy. In this day and age performing the Haka is a
way for the individual to find his inner-warrior, to unleash the beast from
within. The Haka is a way for differences of race, upbringing, religion, and
social status to melt away and be replaced by the bonds of unity and a sense of
belong to a larger entity than oneself. As an American football player and a
team captain and leader, I have performed the Haka many times with my team. But
our team, and I would argue more of the teams who perform the
Haka than not, did it behind closed doors. For us, the Haka was about mental preparation as a player and as a team. It brought us together and allowed us all to enter a state of mind where we are ready to lay it all out on the field for the people standing next to us on our own battlefield. The Haka has survived the years and become something more than it once was. It has changed into exactly what it is needed to be by hundreds upon thousands of young athletes trying to make their way in life and find a sense of belonging.
Haka than not, did it behind closed doors. For us, the Haka was about mental preparation as a player and as a team. It brought us together and allowed us all to enter a state of mind where we are ready to lay it all out on the field for the people standing next to us on our own battlefield. The Haka has survived the years and become something more than it once was. It has changed into exactly what it is needed to be by hundreds upon thousands of young athletes trying to make their way in life and find a sense of belonging.
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