This image depicts the toko wananga
, stick-like representations of "departmental gods" used at the whare wananga
, i.e. Maori schools. According to White, who was commissioned by the New Zealand government to compile this information, the sticks are:
- Tumatauenga: perfectly straight to represent how Tu "stood erect . . . at the deluge"
- Tawhirimatea, god of the weather: shaped like a corkscrew, to represent "the whirling of the winds and clouds"
- Tane, god of the forest: a semicircular bend representing the "swelling and growth of bulbs, shrubs, and tree"
- Tangaroa, god of the sea: a zigzag shape representing "the waves of the sea"
- Rongo, god of cultivation: the rounded curves representing how the kumara "raised the earth in little mounds" as it grows
- Huamia, god of uncultivated plants: three semicircular bends representing the "irregular and twisted form of the fern-root when newly dug up"
In addition, Maori godsticks also refers to the tiki wananga
. These are characterised by a carved head, the tiki
, on a wooden shaft with a pointed end. These were used by priests for various religious rites, either held in hand or staked into the ground to form a temporary shrine. A typical example thus looks quite different from the above sticks:
Source: the collection of the Minneapolis Art Institute
Such godsticks were regarded as a medium for channeling a spirit, not an idol in and of themselves. Identification of depicted deities is the same as with other Maori carvings or art - and thus similarly difficult due to a lack of surviving knowledge as well as tribal differences in art styles.