Like all Polynesian people, niueans love to celebrate. A major event for teenage boys is their "haircutting ceremony". Many boys keep a long tail of hair since childhood and this is ritually removed at a gathering held at the boys home, usually on a Saturday.
Guests involved to the feast contribute considerable amounts of food and money to a fund that goes to the boy after expenses are paid. The pastor and close family members cut locks of hair that have been tied with ribbon, and everyone sits down at the following feast.
Niuean society treats the hair as a sacred element of self-identity, a tradition dating back to times when haircutting was, in fact, very infrequent. Long hair is deemed to be a mark of either womenhood, feminine traits, or childhood; the three, to many niueans, are interchangable. Thus, haircutting symbolizes a "leaving behind" of childhood, and finally accepting ones eventual destiny as a man.
cause they have become a young adult
Like all Polynesian people, niueans love to celebrate. A major event for teenage boys is their "haircutting ceremony". Many boys keep a long tail of hair since childhood and this is ritually removed at a gathering held at the boys home, usually on a Saturday.Guests involved to the feast contribute considerable amounts of food and money to a fund that goes to the boy after expenses are paid. The pastor and close family members cut locks of hair that have been tied with ribbon, and everyone sits down at the following feast.
The haircutting ceremony is a rite of passage for young boys. At these large gatherings the boy sits on a chair draped with tīvaevae (quilts). As his hair is cut, members of the community plaster the boy with money or other gifts. The custom serves to maintain reciprocal ties within the extended family and community.
Niuean history dancing (takalo) is represented by a war dance. It is usallly performed by boys to show that they have grown up as men..
bahmistva
The Kesassa Ceremony is a traditional ceremony of the Dinka people in South Sudan. It is a rite of passage for young boys to signify their transition into adulthood. The ceremony involves dancing, singing, and the boys being circumcised as a symbol of their readiness to take on adult responsibilities within the community.
Proabably
HOPE THIS HELPS:1)This ceremony is traditionally for boys 2)It is usually taken between the ages 5 and 123)They wear a thread over their left shoulder4)The ceremony symbolises maturity5)It is like a second birth for the Hidu boys
Bar Mitzvah
All babies are special. I think baby boys are special because they are cute
Of Māori and Niuean descent,[2] Weepu hails from Mangawhakawhaka, he played his senior rugby with Hutt Old Boys Parist, under the tutelage of his mentor Diriek Bruche. He attended Te Faute College where he was giving Heads to Boys
incas and aztecs had quinceneras