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570 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2003
Effective leaders were kaumātua or family heads, while whole hapū would be spoken for at wider hui by rangatira who usually had a whakapapa claim to leadership…
This persistent reluctance to accept the growing independence on offer from Britain has been linked by some historians to a ‘withering of the country’s spirit’. Another symptom of such ‘withering’ has been identified as the exodus of much of the nation’s talent, which went abroad throughout this era in search of more fertile soil in which to flourish. Some of these talented people – the brilliant physicist Ernest Rutherford, for example, the first scientist to split the atom ...
Parliamentary Librarian G. H. Scholefield concluded: ‘Maori history is sadly distorted and vitiated by the highly developed tribalism and the intense rivalries of the generations that the Maoris have spent in New Zealand … [The] spirit of tribal pride moves even the broadminded Maori to ignore … the vicissitudes of their own tribes and chiefs.’