And if some woman didn't know she was pregnant when she visited???![]()
And if some woman didn't know she was pregnant when she visited???![]()
Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........![]()
" Life is not a rehearsal, it's as happy or miserable as you want to make it"
Hmmm I dont understand what is so offensive
Yes when you should respect their way when you are given the priveledge to view a sacred part of their culture.
Like not taking cameras into the buddhist temples or taking your shoes off, just because I don't necessarily believe it (though it is a beautiful religion) I still do it.
It is saying ALL women....Maori and otherwise
No they aren't.
They are explaining the beliefs of the people to whom these things belonged and requesting that pregnant/menstruating women respect that.
The irony is, if Te Papa didn't make this statement, Hone Harawira and his ilk would be screaming that they weren't respecting the items.
Plus, this is a behind-the-scenes tour in any case. The rest of the museum is open slather for women up the duff.
HOLY EDIT BATMAN: - it's not even for the public. It's for regional museum staff. (and it's up to 351 comments now).
Last edited by Mully; 12th October 2010 at 15:15. Reason: Cos I'm Batman
I'm confused why people make such a big deal out of being respectful to other peoples cultures and beliefs
Im pulling out early cos I can see this getting out o control![]()
Te Papa is on shaky grounds. This is discrimination. Human Rights Commission anyone?
how much of the tour is around these sacred maori objects?
Why put shit into a museum then proceed to restrict who can see it? They should put the sacred objects in a marae and then they've got their own club rules they can apply.
How do they tell whether a woman is menstruating or pregnant? (Ignore the obvously pregnant answer). Is this an honesty system?
Imagine if the role was reversed... Me as a white man put my triumph in Te Papa and said culturally I couldn't let anyone with a maori tattoo in to see it. Would that go down well? I bet I would be had up nationally or internationally on discrimination grounds.
Originally Posted by FlangMaster
...yet many Maori live by tikanga just fine and still have their ipods. Since it isn't visible to non-Maori (through a combination of geographical remoteness and wilful blindness) it's convenient to pretend it's just cultural kow-tow Maori people pull out in public places to piss us off.
Me....i think all woman should just stay in the kitchen with thier slippers on and get the bloody dishes done myself. This way we wouldn't have a problem with this sort of thing at all.
No ya place i say.
This thing will just not go fast enough>>>>>
![]()
Trumpydom!
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks