Ali Rogin:
They marched for nine days in the dark and through the rain, carrying portraits of generations past and the flag symbolizing their right to self-determination.
Protesters from New Zealand’s native Maori community walked alongside non-indigenous New Zealanders to form what’s thought to be the largest March in the nation’s history. The peaceful show of force culminated last month in the capital, Wellington, outside Parliament.
At the protest’s heart, a bill proposing changes to New Zealand’s founding document, the Treaty of Waitangi, or Te Tiriti o Waitangi.















































