The people of the land.
Tangata Whenua (people of the land).
Tangata whenua is a Maori term from New Zealand that translates to "people of the land." It refers to the indigenous people of the country who have ancestral ties to the land and hold a special connection to it.
The Maori are the native people of New Zealand. Maori come from New Zealand. The spiritual homeland for Maori is Hawaiiki. No one is really sure about where this place is but there are many theories of where it might be. The Maori people are most certainly the "Tangata Whenua" or the native race of New Zealand. There are Tangata Whenua/ Maori Iwi groups whose whakapapa indicate that they are native to Aotearoa. These same Tangata Whenua do not have any history of migrating from another place to this whenua. They have always been in Aotearoa. The simple truth is though, no one has yet come up with any proof positive where Maori came from, so the consider themselves indigenous to New Zealand.
To Live A Life, Not To Exist Within One
Ngati Whatua is the name of an Iwi whose tribal lands lie between the Kaipara harbour and Tamaki Makaurau (Auckland).
..Tēnei tangata/ te tangata nei
Tangata Vavia was born in 1949.
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The Maori word for land is "whenua."
David Tangata-Toa was born on 1981-07-15.
Andrew Tangata-Toa was born on 1974-02-15.
translate to English vuelvo a nacer