Mokorua
One womanās journey to her moko kauae as an expression of her KÄi Tahu identity.
I kÄ rÄ o mua, I would know my place
in my tÄ«punaās time, I would know my face.
Mokorua is a revealing and emotional account of one woman receiving her moko kauae.
Ariana Tikao grew up in suburban Christchurch in the 1970s and ā80s surrounded by te ao PÄkehÄ. This book tells the story of Ariana exploring her whakapapa, her whÄnau history and her language. This is one womanās story, but it is interwoven with the revival of language, tikanga and identity among KÄi Tahu whÄnau over the last thirty years.
Arianaās journey culminates in her decision to take on Mokorua ā her moko kauae ā from tÄ moko artist Christine Harvey. After an emotionally charged ceremony that brought together whÄnau, young and old, for songs and tautoko, hugs and tears, Ariana writes: āOur whÄnau had reached another milestone in the decolonisation process ā or, rather, in our journey of reindigenising ourselves, becoming who we always were.ā
Through Arianaās words, te reo MÄori text by her hoa tÄne Ross Calman, and an intimate, moving photo essay by Matt Calman, Mokorua reveals the journey of one woman reclaiming her MÄori identity.
My moko has now surfaced from beneath my skin, and she, Mokorua, has revealed
herself in her green-lined goodness.
Original: $5.76
-65%$5.76
$2.02
Description
One womanās journey to her moko kauae as an expression of her KÄi Tahu identity.
I kÄ rÄ o mua, I would know my place
in my tÄ«punaās time, I would know my face.
Mokorua is a revealing and emotional account of one woman receiving her moko kauae.
Ariana Tikao grew up in suburban Christchurch in the 1970s and ā80s surrounded by te ao PÄkehÄ. This book tells the story of Ariana exploring her whakapapa, her whÄnau history and her language. This is one womanās story, but it is interwoven with the revival of language, tikanga and identity among KÄi Tahu whÄnau over the last thirty years.
Arianaās journey culminates in her decision to take on Mokorua ā her moko kauae ā from tÄ moko artist Christine Harvey. After an emotionally charged ceremony that brought together whÄnau, young and old, for songs and tautoko, hugs and tears, Ariana writes: āOur whÄnau had reached another milestone in the decolonisation process ā or, rather, in our journey of reindigenising ourselves, becoming who we always were.ā
Through Arianaās words, te reo MÄori text by her hoa tÄne Ross Calman, and an intimate, moving photo essay by Matt Calman, Mokorua reveals the journey of one woman reclaiming her MÄori identity.
My moko has now surfaced from beneath my skin, and she, Mokorua, has revealed
herself in her green-lined goodness.











