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Māori Americans are Americans of Māori descent, an ethnic group from New Zealand. Some Māori are Mormons and are drawn to Mormon regions of Hawaii and Utah, as well as in California, Arizona and Nevada. Māori were part of the first Mormon Polynesian colony of the US, which was founded in Utah in 1889.
- New Zealand Americans
Some 925 of those New Zealand-Americans declared they were...
- Māori People
Māori (Māori: [ˈmaːɔɾi] ⓘ) are the indigenous Polynesian...
- New Zealand Americans
Os primeiros exploradores europeus às ilhas da Nova Zelândia se referiam às pessoas que lá encontraram como "aborígenes", "nativos" ou "neozelandeses". Maori permaneceu como o termo usado pelos maoris para descreverem a si mesmos. Em 1947, o Departamento de Relações Nativas foi renomeado para Departamento de Relações Maoris para ...
US Forces in New Zealand. Page 9 – Americans and Māori. ‘Haere mai, Amerikana’. In 1942, New Zealand may not have had ‘the best race relations in the world’, as some claimed, but there was wide acceptance of relaxed social exchanges between Māori and Pākehā in public. Some of the Americans had different traditions.
Māori, member of a Polynesian people of New Zealand. Traditional history and first contact Their traditional history describes their origins in terms of waves of migration that culminated in the arrival of a “great fleet” in the 14th century from Hawaiki, a mythical land usually identified as Tahiti.
Māori are the indigenous Polynesian people of mainland New Zealand. Māori originated with settlers from East Polynesia, who arrived in New Zealand in several waves of canoe voyages between roughly 1320 and 1350.