Urupā

Urupā are traditional Māori cemeteries in New Zealand.[1] These burial grounds hold significant cultural and spiritual importance for Māori communities as sacred places where ancestors are laid to rest.

Etymology

The word urupā comes from the Māori language, where uru means "to enter" or "to go into,"[2] and refers to a fortified village or settlement.[3] Collectively, urupā is understood as a place of burial or cemetery.[4]

History and significance

Prior to colonisation, Māori death practices involved suspending the tūpāpaku ('corpse') in a tree, allowing the flesh to decay in the open air. After this, the bones would be collected and interred in secret burial locations (wāhi tapu).[5] After colonisation, Māori widely adopted more western burial practices, with burial grounds associated closely to important cultural locations such as marae.[6] These burial sites—which in many cases resemble standard western cemeteries, including headstones—are known as urupā.

Under New Zealand law, tribal burial sites are exempt from the Burial and Cremation Act 1964, so that Māori can practice their own burial customs.[5][7]

Urupā are culturally important sites to Māori, representing a major part of their connection with the whenua ('land').[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Tangihanga - Death customs
  2. ^ "uru", Te Aka Māori Dictionary, retrieved 11 August 2025
  3. ^ "pā", Te Aka Māori Dictionary, retrieved 11 August 2025
  4. ^ "urupā", Te Aka Māori Dictionary, retrieved 15 September 2025
  5. ^ a b McNeill, Hinematau Naomi, "Decolonizing Indigenous Burial Practices in Aotearoa, New Zealand: A Tribal Case Study", OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying, SAGE Publications, doi:10.1177/00302228211070153, PMC 11017688, retrieved 15 September 2025
  6. ^ McManus, Ruth; Du Plessis, Rosemary, "Death and dying – Burials and cemeteries", Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, retrieved 15 September 2025
  7. ^ New Zealand Parliamentary Counsel Office (8 August 2024), "Burial and Cremation Act 1964 No 75 (as at 23 December 2023)", New Zealand Legislation, New Zealand Government, retrieved 15 September 2025
  8. ^ Welham, Keri (Spring 2019), "In Good Heart", Heritage New Zealand, no. 154, pp. 37–41, ISSN 1175-9615