The Role of the Tohunga—Past and Present
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1558/rsth.v26i2.135Keywords:
Maori Christianity, tohunga, RatanaAbstract
In traditional Maori society before the coming of the white man [pakeha], the spiritual leader [tohunga] was the person who was in communication with the gods and spirits [atua] and who maintained the laws of sacredness [tapu] and regulated the life and events of their village. Because of his great authority and power [mana], the tohunga, his instruments and dwelling were tapu. However, with the coming of the white man with his guns, goods, new diseases, and his ignoring of the laws of tapu, the tohunga was seen as losing his mana. Those who continued to use the traditional methods of healing against the new diseases, often with disastrous results, were regarded as charlatans to the extent that legislation was eventually enacted against any who continued to claim to function as a tohunga.
However, emerging out of the Maori wars was a new form of tohunga who had accepted Christianity and combined its teachings with some of the Maori culture and customs. Thus they have become the new Maori spiritual leaders and faith healers, exercising not their own power through the strictures of tapu, but the power of God and his holy angels to heal and restore the Maori to fullness of life.
References
Best, Elsden 1934 The Maori as he Was: A Brief Accountof Maori Life as it Was in Pre-European Days. Wellington, NZ: Dominion Museum.
Dow, Derek A. 2001 “ ‘Pruned of its Dangers’: The Tohunga Suppression Act 1907.” Health and History 3: 41–64.
Fisher, Robin. 2003 “The Impact of European Settlement on the Indigenous Peoples of Australia, New Zealand, and British Columbia: Some Comparative Dimensions.” In Jane Samson ed., British Imperial Strategies in the Pacific, 1750–1900, 205–18. Vol. 8 of The Pacific World: Lands, Peoples and History pf the Pacific, 1500–1900. Hampshire: Ashgate.
Foster, B.J. 1966 “Rua Tapunui Hepetipa or Kenana Rua Hepetipa,” An Encyclopedia of New Zealand, ed. A.H. McLintock. Wellington: R.E. Owen.
Henderson, J. McLeod. 1972 Ratana: The Man, the Church, the Political Movement. Wellington, NZ: A.H. and H.W. Reed. Repr. 1963.
Kawharau, H. Trans. 1840 Treaty of Waitangi. http://aotearoa.wellington.net.nz/back/treat.htm.
Sinclair, Keith. 1969 A History of New Zealand. rev. ed. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
Voyce, Malcolm. 1989 Maori Healers in New Zealand: The Tohunga Suppression Act of 1907. Oceania 60: 107–10.