Are you ready yet?
By | Nov 8, 2007
Alison Jones gave a brilliant and timely challenge to our nation in her inaugural lecture at the University of Auckland that has been editted for the New Zealand Herald in the following article:
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=252&objectid=10474571&pnum=0
At a time when the parliament and executive have been so loose with labelling political activism as terrorism, when NZ First has again attempted to get parliament to wipe te Tiriti o Waitangi from the record, and the violent arm of the state has brutalised Ngai Tuhoe (again), Jones’ comments are questions of maturity and insight.
Put simply, she asks if Pakeha are willing to build a relationship with Maori yet. She suggests up until now:
“Pakeha have largely refused a relationship of positive, real, engagement, being busy instead with forms of colonisation, and with “being entertained” by, and “doing good things” for, Maori.”
This question is so pertinent because, frankly, as a descendent of te Pirirakau, Ngati Rangiwewehi and Ngati Hinerangi, I am one of a lot of pissed off tangata whenua. I don’t trust the police, the executive, and most of the parliament. I don’t want a bar of the New Zealand that Pakeha are creating for themselves. And as a result of the last month’s events, I’ve rapidly become more sympathetic to those who may have advocated violent struggle. I’ve even caught myself beginning to think in the excluding language that I used as a 19 year old: “those” Pakeha supported by “their” state with “their” kupapa, pet Maori in parliament.
I’d rather have some faith restored that we are building a social contract that seeks a just relationship based in te Tiriti and honours our collective role in building Aotearoa. So the question remains to one and all: are you ready yet?
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Comments
JimHunt
December 2nd, 2007 at 5:08 pm
The situation is made difficult in a democracy where the majority vote counts, and now, with attention being given to other racial groups, I notice that no on remembers that we pakeha learned from living alongside Maori, that they all need to keep up their language and culture. The new people need to learn about the Treaty.
On this website we are discussing as Anglicans, who have tried to get round the majority/minority thing by have a Tikanga Maori with equal voting rights alongside Tikanga Pakeha and Polynesia. My wife and I try to worship in the nearest Tikanga Maori church about once a month to keep up relations, but we find it difficult to persuade others from either side to try this for themselves. Let’s work on this sort of thing as church people and get to know each other locally as well as in General Synod. Its a better place to start than at the Beehive. That comes later.