More Facts about New Zealand
- The Maori are the indigenous people of New Zealand (like the American
Indians in the USA). They arrived from Polynesia by canoe more than 400
years before Christopher Columbus set foot in the Americas. Today, Maoris
make up 15.4 percent of the population.
- New Zealand is known as the Land of the
Long White Cloud, an English translation of Te Whenua o Aotearoa, the name
given to the island country by its original settlers.
- Before the arrival of Europeans in the mid-18th century,
the Maoris led a sophisticated social and material life. They had gods,
generals, warriors, priests, chiefs, artists, slaves, even puhi tapu or sacred
virgins, the daughters of great chiefs who were protected until a useful
political marriage could be arranged. They had forts, villages, beach
cottages, plantations, and lovely clothes. Since the Maiori lifestyle was so foreign to early European settlers, they considered the native people as savages.
- The kiwi is a flightless bird that is distinct and unique to New
Zealand. The Maori always regarded the kiwi as a special bird and
associated it with their god of the forest. Even early Europeans described
the kiwi as a most remarkable and curious bird. Today it is the national bird of the
country. By the early 20th
century, the people of New Zealand became known as Kiwis, perhaps because
they are as distinct and unique as the bird.
- Did you pump gasoline this week? A Kiwi invented the electronic gas
pump. Ever read a story about law enforcement officers taking down a
rabid animal or violent criminal with a tranquilizer gun? A Kiwi invented
that. Feeling more physically fit now that you’ve started jogging? You can
either thank or curse a Kiwi. Do you have a neighbor who contains his dog
in the yard with an electric fence? Yep, that came from a Kiwi. Ever watch
a daredevil bungy jump from a bridge and wonder who came up with the idea?
That would be A. J. Hackett, a Kiwi. Feel safer now that you have
bugler-proof windows installed? Thank a Kiwi. The idea for the whistle blown by the referee to stop action play at your favorite sporting event came from a Kiwi.
And the list goes on.
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