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1 Te Whiti o Rongomai
(c1830-1907)Leader of passive resistance against European confiscation of Maori Land, and a Maori perhaps more unfairly treated by pakeha settlers than any other. He was born in Taranaki, a member of the Te Ati Awa tribe, and educated at a mission school, where he was noted for his aptitude for bible studies. After he left school he set up a flour mill at a place called Warea, about 35 kilometres south-west of New Plymouth, and was living peacefully in the parihaka.area when in March 1860, the early days of the Land Wars, the undefended settlement was shelled from the sea by a British warship, the Niger, and then burned to the ground by colonial troops. He later established Parihaka. -
2 Parihaka
Maori community or kainga led by Te Whiti o Rongomai. They had not joined in the previous uprising against the government. Their non-violent community was raided when the government decided they could sell the land. Te Whiti and other leaders were imprisoned in 1881. They were released in 1883
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Te Whiti o Rongomai — region.In 1867, the great Māori chief established a village at Parihaka. He wanted his people to regain their land, pride and self respect after the confiscations in other parts of the North Island. His aim seems to have been to establish a new… … Wikipedia
Te Whiti — may refer to:* Te Whiti, New Zealand, a community in the Wairarapa region. * Te Whiti o Rongomai, a Māori spiritual leader … Wikipedia
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