'I will not leave my baby behind': A Cook Island Maori family's experience of New Zealand Maori traditional healing

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Authors

NiaNia, Wiremu
Bush, Allister
Epston, David

Author ORCID Profiles (clickable)

Degree

Grantor

Date

2013-05-16

Supervisors

Type

Journal Article

Ngā Upoko Tukutuku (Māori subject headings)

Keyword

Cook Islanders in New Zealand
family therapy
indigenous
New Zealand Māori
traditional healing
Cook Island Māori
New Zealand
Māori
exorcism

Citation

NiaNia, W., Tere, Bush, A., and Epston, D. (2013). 'I will not leave my baby behind': A Cook Island Maori family's experience of New Zealand Maori traditional healing. Austalian and New Zealand journal of family therapy, 34, 3-17.

Abstract

Traditional healers in many parts of the world have used family focused understandings and interventions well before the emergence of western family therapy theory and practice. This paper gives a detailed account of New Zealand. Māori traditional healing work with a Cook Island Māori family in which the eldest daughter was in considerable distress as were her family, who believed that she had become maki tūpāpaku (possessed). This account is told from the perspectives of the child psychiatrist, the traditional healer and the mother of the family. While the intervention bears a superficial resemblance to western family therapy approaches, the theoretical foundation reflects the traditional healer’s New Zealand Māori world views in which spiritual understandings are paramount, and concepts of mana, tapu and mauri guide him in the family healing process. The single session described here can be viewed as an indigenous family therapy intervention involving six generations of family members, both living and deceased, in the one room. Conclusions: Indigenous communities have called for traditional healers to be employed alongside child mental health workers and family therapists who work with their communities. Close and sincere collaboration between an indigenous traditional healer and a health professional can offer a family in distress healing possibilities that may not be available to them in conventional child mental health or other family therapy settings.

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Link to ePress publication

DOI

doi: 10.1002/anzf.1002

Copyright holder

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Copyright notice

© 2013 Australian Association of Family Therapy

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