Figures
Cause
Effect
Significant features
100

 The number of signatures on the Memorial of Rights document

60,000

100

The main cause for the of the 1975 Māori Land March

Land grievances/loss of spiritual, Māori owned land

100

The names of the protests inspired by the 1975 Māori Land March

Bastion Point, Raglan Golf Course

100

The leader of the 1975 Māori Land march

Dame Whina Cooper

200

The number of marchers that arrived at parliament

5,000

200

The process in which Māori moved away from their whenua to cities (often for job opportunities)

urbanisation

200

The name of the commission of inquiry that allowed Māori to file claims of grievances and receive compensation

The Waitangi Tribunal

200

English translation of "Te Roopu O Matakite"

"Those with foresight"

300

The distance the march travelled (km)

1,100km

300

Concepts that were severed through significant Māori land loss (double points if both concepts are named)

Whakapapa and/or whanaungatanga 

300

Name of legislation that established Māori as a national language 

1987 Māori language act

300

The age of Whina Cooper when the Māori land march started

79 years old

400

The amount of land originally under Māori ownership

66 million

400

The percentage of New Zealand land owned by the crown/pakeha by 1920

92% 

400

The value of the compensation ($) given to Waikato-Tainui under the 1995 Deed of Settlement between the Crown and Tainui

$170mil

400

Dame Whina Cooper's iconic phrase in relation to the Māori Land March

"Not one more acre!"

500

The exact date the march started and ended (e.g. 3rd March - 14th April 2005)

14th September - 13th October 1975

500

What did urbanisation cause?

Loss of individual connection to whenua/culture

(something along those lines)

500

Name of the Māori politician/parliament member who passed the 1975 Waitangi Tribunal

Matiu Rata

500

What does the pouwhenua represent in Māori culture

A marker/post that indicates territorial boundaries or places of spiritual significance

M
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