The Brits actually respected the Maori and integrated their culture unlike in Australia
Watu wa rugby
They were unable to subdue the fierce maori and thus the brits had to kukunja mkia and coexist. The maori need to be liberated the way the south africans and zimbabweans too back their country.
Why? They get along perfectly fine
Do some reading. Not videos.
I’d say Uruguay and many Spanish colonies where after the conquistadors and shit they just started intermarrying with the natives.
Many south American Spanish colonies have mullatos/mestizos being the majority rather than pure racial groups.With mullatos being less prevalent but many Latinas have distant African heritage although it might not be visible.
The British were pretty much driven by greed and need for land acquisition.Slavery in Spanish colonies far from the mines allowed some level of interracial relationships which was highly frowned upon by their British counterparts.
They are just having a temporary ceasefire. Even today they want the Treaty of Waitangi where maori chiefs were duped to surrender their lands (just like masai treaties in kenya) nullified.
Copied:
The New Zealand Wars were a series of armed conflicts that took place in New Zealand from 1845 to 1872 between the Colonial government and allied Māori on one side and Māori and Māori-allied settlers on the other. They were previously commonly referred to as the Land Wars or the Māori Wars[2] while Māori language names for the conflicts included Ngā pakanga o Aotearoa (“the great New Zealand wars”) and Te riri Pākehā (“the white man’s anger”).[2] Historian James Belich popularised the name “New Zealand Wars” in the 1980s,[3] although the term was first used by historian James Cowan in the 1920s.[4]
Though the wars were initially localised conflicts triggered by tensions over disputed land purchases, they escalated dramatically from 1860 as the government became convinced it was facing united Māori resistance to further land sales and a refusal to acknowledge Crown sovereignty. The colonial government summoned thousands of British troops to mount major campaigns to overpower the Kīngitanga (Māori King) movement and also acquire farming and residential land for British settlers.[5][6] Later campaigns were aimed at quashing the so-called Hauhau movement, an extremist part of the Pai Mārire religion, which was strongly opposed to the alienation of Māori land and eager to strengthen Māori identity.[7]
At the peak of hostilities in the 1860s, 18,000 British troops, supported by artillery, cavalry and local militia, battled about 4,000 Māori warriors[8] in what became a gross imbalance of manpower and weaponry.[9] Although outnumbered, the Māori were able to withstand their enemy with techniques that included anti-artillery bunkers and the use of carefully placed pā, or fortified villages, that allowed them to block their enemy’s advance and often inflict heavy losses, yet quickly abandon their positions without significant loss. Guerrilla-style tactics were used by both sides in later campaigns, often fought in dense bush. Over the course of the Taranaki and Waikato campaigns, the lives of about 1,800 Māori and 800 Europeans were lost,[5] and total Māori losses over the course of all the wars may have exceeded 2,100.
Violence over land ownership broke out first in the Wairau Valley in the South Island in June 1843, but rising tensions in Taranaki eventually led to the involvement of British military forces at Waitara in March 1860. The war between the government and Kīngitanga Māori spread to other areas of the North Island, with the biggest single campaign being the invasion of the Waikato in 1863–1864, before hostilities concluded with the pursuits of Riwha Tītokowaru in Taranaki (1868–1869) and Rangatira (chief) Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki on the east coast (1868–1872).
Although Māori were initially fought by British forces, the New Zealand government developed its own military force, including local militia, rifle volunteer groups, the specialist Forest Rangers and kūpapa (pro-government Māori). The government also responded with legislation to imprison Māori opponents and confiscate expansive areas of the North Island for sale to settlers, with the funds used to cover war expenses[10][11]—punitive measures that on the east and west coasts provoked an intensification of Māori resistance and aggression.
Treaty of Waitangi protests
The Māori protest movement is a broad indigenous-rights movement in New Zealand (Aotearoa). While there were a range of conflicts between Māori and Europeans prior to the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, the signing provided a legal context for protesting, as the Treaty of Waitangi made New Zealand a British colony with British law and governance applying. The British authorities had drafted the Treaty with the intention of establishing a British Governor of New Zealand, recognising Māori ownership of their lands, forests and other possessions, and giving Māori the rights of British subjects. However, the Māori and English texts of the Treaty differ in meaning significantly; particularly in relation to the meaning of having and ceding sovereignty. These discrepancies, and the British goal[citation needed] of colonisation, led to disagreements in the decades following the signing, including full-out warfare.
In its modern form, the Māori protest movement emerged in the early 1970s[citation needed] as part of a broader Māori renaissance and has focused on issues such as the redressing Treaty of Waitangi grievances, Māori land-rights, the Māori language, culture, and racism. It has generally allied with the left wing, although it differs from the mainstream left in a number of ways. Most members of the movement have been Māori but it has attracted some support from pākehā (non-Māori) New Zealanders and internationally, particularly from other indigenous peoples. Notable successes of the movement include establishment of the Waitangi Tribunal in 1975, the return of some Māori land, and the Māori language becoming an official language of New Zealand in 1987.
Summary?
Jifunze kusoma.
Maori say they are tired of being colonised and want their land back.
[SIZE=7]Māori have been robbed of our identity and our land – we must fight to get them back[/SIZE]
https://www.theguardian.com/world/commentisfree/2020/feb/09/maori-have-been-robbed-of-our-identity-and-our-land-we-must-fight-to-get-them-back
Ati better, New Zealand still has the queen as the head of state, soma history kijana uache ujuaji mingi
I mean relative to all other lands the Brits set foot on
The maori lost 95% of their lands which are occupied by british settlers to date. NZ is the largest sheep and dairy exporter and this is done on the lands stolen from maoris. The situation in NZ is like the situation in Kenya in the 1940s when the local kenyans were coexisting with british quietly slaving in settler farms before africans said enough is enough.
Co-existing peacefully?? No way. Brits fucked up Maoris real bad. They stole their land and made them squatters in their own land. Brits own huge tracts of farmland where dairy products are exported from. There have been renewed calls by Maoris to get their land back which seems to be working one way or another. The Maoris even advocated for their language to be revived and taught in schools after Brits wanted to kill it the way they did with Native American and Aboriginal languages and culture. New Zealand has a population of 5million people of which 900k-1 million people are Native Maoris. The other 4 million includes Europeans, Islander i.e Fijians, Tongans, Samoans and Asians. Right now the Islanders population is rising very fast especially Maoris and Samoans. Lets see what happens.
[SIZE=1]na thighs muoto[/SIZE]
Read the novel: The Whale Rider by Witi Ihimeara ndio utajua how the imperial British empire fuck Maori big time…