Como muestra de respeto, casi todos los alumnos de esta escuela de Nueva Zelanda realizan el Haka a la llegada del coche fúnebre con los restos mortales del profesor Dawson Tamatea, que falleció a la edad de 55 años, habiendo sido profesor en esta escuela durante casi 30 años.
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etiquetas: danza , baile , haka , profesor , escuela , dawson tamatea , nueva zelanda
Impresionante.
Al menos no los han exterminado completamente como a los apaches, y de vez en cuando menean el culito a ritmo de haka, es verdad...
Porque el profesor al que hacian el homenaje era precisamente Maorí.
Blancos:78,7%; maoríes:14,6%; asiáticos:9,2%; polinesios:6,9%; otros:0,9% [4].
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demografía_de_Nueva_Zelanda
Teneis que venir SIEMPRE a destrozar cualquier buena noticia con los putos lloros.
Sois toxicos, en serio.
Socioeconomic challenges
Māori on average have fewer assets than the rest of the population, and run greater risks of many negative economic and social outcomes. Over 50% of Māori live in areas in the three highest deprivation deciles, compared with 24% of the rest of the population.[96] Although Māori make up only 14% of the population, they make up almost 50% of the prison population.[97]
Māori have higher unemployment-rates than other cultures resident in New Zealand [98] Māori have higher numbers of suicides than non-Māori.[99] "Only 47% of Māori school-leavers finish school with qualifications higher than NCEA Level One; compared to 74% European; 87% Asian."[100] Although New Zealand rates well very globally in the PISA rankings that compare national performance in reading, science and maths "...once you disaggregate the PISA scores, Pakeha students are second in the world and Maori are 34th..."[101] Māori suffer more health problems, including higher levels of alcohol and drug abuse, smoking and obesity. Less frequent use of healthcare services mean that late diagnosis and treatment intervention lead to higher levels of morbidity and mortality in many manageable conditions, such as cervical cancer,[102] diabetes[103] per head of population than non-Māori.[104] Although Māori life expectancy rates have increased dramatically in the last 50 years, they still have considerably lower life-expectancies compared to New Zealanders of European ancestry: in 2004, Māori males lived 69.0 years vs. non-Māori males 77.2 years; Māori females 73.2 yrs vs. non-Māori females 81.9 years.[105] This gap had narrowed by 2013: 72.8 years for men and 76.5 years for women, compared to 80.2 years for non-Māori men and 83.7 years for non-Māori women.[106] Also, a recent study by the New Zealand Family Violence Clearinghouse showed that Māori women and children are more likely to experience domestic violence than any other ethnic group.[107]
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_people#Socioeconomic_challenges