Maori Religion and Mythology by Edward Shortland
The Story
Okay, so here’s the deal: Edward Shortland was a British doctor who became obsessed with Māori culture during the 1800s. Instead of just studying from books, he actually lived with iwi (tribes) and interviewed elders. Maori Religion and Mythology is his attempt to write down their sacred stories.
The book starts with creation myths—how the sky father Ranginui and the earth mother Papatūānuku were once so tightly embraced that their children got stuck in darkness. The stories are vivid, almost violent in the way they describe how the children separated them. You’ll meet Maui — a trickster demigod who slowed the sun, fished up islands, and kind of got annoying with his ego. Also cool: their beliefs around death, with spirits traveling to Cape Reinga to leap off into the underworld. Shortland doesn’t just list facts; he compares Māori ideas to Christianity and older Hebrew traditions, which gets you thinking.
But fair warning—it’s not a novel. There’s no plot. It’s more like a collection of teachings, with Shortland nervously explaining that he messed up some details because informants disagreed. Wait, whoa.
Why You Should Read It
This book isn’t for everyone, but if you’re into history, anthropology, or just really amazing origin stories, you’ll dig it. Shortland clearly respected what he was learning, and that respect gives the book a gentle soul. I finished it feeling sad that we lost so much of this worldview, but also thrilled that recipes and songs aren’t behind us. You will absolutely find yourself googling Māori art or New Zealand tours by page fifty.
What got me is how Māori treated nature like a family member. To them, the forest was Tāne-mahuta͏, the sky as their Dad. You cannot mess with earth without making a god upset. Makes our plastic packaging look lame.
Final Verdict
You’ll love this if you’re weary of typical Western religion stuff. Bonus points that it’s a primary source written before the internet. Skippable if you want a thriller; but this is the secret origin story that *never* shows up in schools.
Rating: 8.5 scary snakes out of 10.
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Donald Miller
1 year agoBefore I started my latest project, I read this and the way it handles controversial points with balance is quite professional. A perfect balance of theory and practical advice.