Memorial carving in honour of WW1 New Zealand soldiers lost during the battle of Passchendaele 1917, monument erected in 2019 near Ypres
(Browse the collection : West Flanders Province time lapse and video stock footage)
The pou maumahara (memorial carving) was installed on 15 April in Passchendaele Memorial Park in Zonnebeke, between Ypres and Passchendaele, in Belgium. During World War I, 2227 Maori served in the Maori Pioneer Battalion, of which 336 died on active service and 734 were wounded. The battalion carried out logistical and construction tasks on the Belgian battlefields, digging trenches and building roads and light railway lines, often under heavy shelling.
On ANZAC Day, 25 april 2019, a new eight meters tall Māori sculpture has been unveiled in the Passchendaele Memorial Park in Zonnebeke. The ‘pou maumahara’ is a wooden memorial made by students and teachers of the NZMACI (New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute) and it commemorates the Māori and other New-Zealanders who served during the First World War. The memorial has two sides, representing Tūmatauenga (war) and Rongomaraeroa (peace).
Mayor of Zonnebeke Dirk Sioen says the installation of the pou maumahara in Zonnebeke, next to the Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917, is a symbol for our community of the long-lasting bond with New Zealand.
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maori03_fhd | maori03_5K+ | maori03_web |
Mov ProRes 422 HQ | Mov ProRes 422 HQ | H264 Mp4 |
227 Mo | 1,89 Go | 12,5 Mo |