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nosferatu_dj
12-10-2010, 07:42 AM
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/10/12/3036252.htm?section=justin

Museum warns pregnant women off Maori exhibit

Posted 2 hours 51 minutes ago
New Zealand's national museum has warned pregnant or menstruating women to stay away from some of its exhibits or risk an encounter with angry Maori spirits.
The Te Papa Museum in Wellington confirmed it had invited regional museum staff on a behind-the-scenes tour of its collections on the condition that women who were pregnant or menstruating did not attend.
The museum's Maori adviser, Michelle Hippolite, said the condition was because some of the Maori artefacts had been used in wars and were believed to contain sprits that could harm pregnant or menstruating women visiting the exhibit.
"They may have an encounter that may be a form of communication," she told Radio NZ.
"Those of us that are accompanying the group might not see this, hear it or understand what may be happening."
Te Papa spokeswoman Jane Keig said the policy was not an outright ban, rather it was strong advice designed to protect pregnant and menstruating woman from exhibits which Maori, New Zealand's indigenous people, believed could hurt them.
"Pregnant women are sacred and the policy is in place to protect women from these objects," she said.
Feminist blogger Deborah Russel said a taxpayer-funded museum should not force visitors to follow religious or cultural beliefs they may not share.
"I don't understand why a secular institution, funded by public money in a secular state, is imposing religious and cultural values on people," she told the New Zealand Herald newspaper.
"It's fair enough for people to engage in their own cultural practices where those practices don't harm others, but the state shouldn't be imposing those practices on other people."
- AFP

pi3141
12-10-2010, 08:10 AM
Te Papa spokeswoman Jane Keig said the policy was not an outright ban, rather it was strong advice designed to protect pregnant and menstruating woman from exhibits which Maori, New Zealand's indigenous people, believed could hurt them.....

... Feminist blogger Deborah Russel said a taxpayer-funded museum should not force visitors to follow religious or cultural beliefs they may not share.


:rolleyes: FFS It makes it quite clear its only 'strong advice' they're not exactly being derogatory towards pregnant women are they.

kiwimaj
12-10-2010, 11:15 AM
:rolleyes: FFS It makes it quite clear its only 'strong advice' they're not exactly being derogatory towards pregnant women are they.

Indeed, I agree !

I think this is fantastic!! It's actually keeping the old ways going and not bowing down to the "P C" fanatics..Yes, it's only advice, not an outright ban and guess what, it has NOTHING to do with anything anti-feminist, it's all about RESPECT for women !

I do have my theories though that the ancient Maori race were interbred with the reptilians...why all the tongue action seen so many times in Maori war dances and the "Haka" for example...?? Just something I have observed.

Opinions from a NZer allowed ! :D

kiwimaj
12-10-2010, 11:19 AM
Oh, and Te Papa is a fantastic museum by the way..and it's FREE to get in..!

(my other job is working for the New Zealand Tourist Board...)...;)

I remember as a kid going to the old museum in Wellington on school trips..every year, anyone else remember that old waka that was seemed to be placed right in the middle of the building?...I LOVE going into Te Papa now when I go back, they've done a fantastic job.

:)

comawhite015
19-10-2010, 12:25 AM
Indeed, I agree !

I think this is fantastic!! It's actually keeping the old ways going and not bowing down to the "P C" fanatics..Yes, it's only advice, not an outright ban and guess what, it has NOTHING to do with anything anti-feminist, it's all about RESPECT for women !

I do have my theories though that the ancient Maori race were interbred with the reptilians...why all the tongue action seen so many times in Maori war dances and the "Haka" for example...?? Just something I have observed.

Opinions from a NZer allowed ! :D

Isn't the tongue use in the pukana symbolic of waving your penis at someone? I think that's why only men are allowed to do it =)

S'what I read in Maori studies, anyhoo..