Johannesburg – The South African Rugby Union have written to their New Zealand counterparts to apologise for the disruption of the Haka before a Test between the countries last Saturday.
New Zealand were performing the Haka, a traditional pre-match routine involving vigorous movement, stamping of feet and rhythmic shouting, when several mix-ups occurred at Ellis Park in Johannesburg.
“(The mix-ups) occurred as a result of timekeeping challenges and simple human error,” SA Rugby chief executive Rian Oberholzer said in a statement.
The closing moments of the Haka clashed with music, fireworks and a flyover by an airliner as a planned schedule went awry.
SA Rugby has formally apologized to the New Zealand rugby team for the disruption of their traditional haka at Ellis Park
The incident occurred when fireworks, music ‘Sister Bettina ‘, and a flyover by an A380 airliner coincided with the end of the haka, drowning out its final… pic.twitter.com/DYjEDHL630
— News Live SA (@newslivesa) September 2, 2024
A sound engineer mistakenly interpreted the cheering of the capacity 62,000 crowd as a sign that the Haka had finished and restarted the music programme.
The Haka, which dates back to the ‘Original All Blacks’ tour to Europe in 1905, is performed by New Zealand after the national anthems and before the kick-off in each international they play. The
“It was never the intention to schedule any activities that would coincide with such an iconic moment of any Test against the All Blacks,” added Oberholzer.
🇿🇦🇳🇿 SA Rugby apologises over Haka interference
SA rugby has apologised to the All Blacks and New Zealand Rugby over the sequence of events that led to the disruption of the haka.
The statement reads:
“The South African Rugby Union has written to the New Zealand Rugby… pic.twitter.com/gs6LJY0PDz
— Jared Wright (@jaredwright17) September 2, 2024
“We hold dear the values and traditions of the game.
“The unfortunate events in no way represent any lack of respect that South African rugby holds for the significance and history of the Haka.”
South Africa won the Test 31-27. The two teams will meet again in Cape Town on Saturday.
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Source: AFP
Picture: X/@jaredwright17
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