Incredible Bird Embodies Ancient Bonds
Kuaka/ Ban-Wei Cheng Yu
()/Godwit:
Incredible Bird
Embodies Ancient Bonds
A
tiny, unassuming bird that flies non-stop from New Zealand
to northern China is one of many ancient bonds to be
celebrated at this year’s inaugural Taniwha & Dragon
Festival.
“New Zealand is better known for its flightless bird the Kiwi, but the amazing story of the Godwit is equally inspiring. Flying without a single break for thousands of kilometres over several days this tiny record holder still outdoes all human-made aircraft when it comes to long distance, non-stop flight,” says Estella Lee, Chinese Conservation Education Trust chair.
Known in China as the Ban-Wei Cheng Yu ()
and in Māori as the Kuaka, the tiny birds are already on
their way to Yalu Jiang. With departure points across New
Zealand, thousands leave from the Miranda Sanctuary on the
Firth of Thames as well as the far north, Te Rerenga Wairua
or Spirits Bay. A hugely sacred place, this is the
departure point for Māori souls back to ancestral
homelands. Godwits cross the Pacific in 7-days and head to
Yalu Jiang – their journey the longest non-stop flight of
any bird on earth.
“Māori ties to China
were forged by voyaging tūpuna who left Asia millennia ago,
writing the final chapter in the story of human exploration
and settling a third of the surface of the planet over 80
generations. Our ancestors followed many guides from nature
including the southern migrating Kuaka, the Ban Wai-Cheng
Yu,” said Te Puni Kōkiri chief executive Michelle
Hippolite.
“This bird traces the journeys of
Māori and Polynesian ancestors back to Asia, back thousands
of miles and thousands of years - forever linking the
peoples of New Zealand to the peoples of China.”
New
Zealand’s Chinese Conservation Education Trust and Miranda
Naturalists’ Trust are working on projects to raise
awareness of the importance of the area and the Godwits. In
the past Ms Lee has watched the Godwits depart from Aotearoa
and then flown to northern China to watch them arrive after
their trans-Pacific flight.
“I feel privileged to
have had this amazing experience and to work on some of the
Miranda Godwit projects that aim to help sustain this
wonderful bird,” she said.
The world’s first
Māori-Chinese cultural celebration, the Taniwha & Dragon
Festival will be held in Auckland on Saturday 27 April,
hosted by Ngāti Whātua o Ōrākei, it is the culmination
of kōrero amongst marae leaders, Auckland Chinese community
leaders and Māori Affairs Minister Pita Sharples. The day
will include a traditional Māori welcome or pōwhiri to
formally acknowledge the Chinese community in New
Zealand.
“The Kuaka, Ban Wai Cheng-Yu
() or Godwit symbolises ancient kinship bonds to
Asia. Their amazing flight reminds us of our incredible
ancestors and their amazing achievements: the flight of this
bird remains an inspirational touchstone for Māori and
Polynesian peoples,” said Mrs Hippolite.
“It is fitting that as our Taniwha and Dragon
Festival opens – Kuaka, Ban Wai Cheng-Yu () or
Godwits will be arriving in northern China.”
Ms Lee says Beijing’s Ministry of Forests has written to the Auckland Branch of the NZ China Friendship Society undertaking to try to protect the Yalu Jiang wetlands in Liaoning province. The seven page letter asked for specific suggestions to make protection more effective. The letter was personally sought on behalf of the Auckland branch by former Consul Long Yangping. Ms Lee says the trust is grateful for the support.
www.tpk.govt.nz for more information
Te Puni Kokiri/Ministry of Māori Development
http://www.tpk.govt.nz/en/newsevents/news/taniwha-dragon-festival/
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