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NZCPR Weekly - One in Six
In this issue, NZCPR Weekly reflects on why one in six Maori live in
Australia, Guest Commentator Kelly Te Heuheu, Maori Crime Specialist
for the Sensible Sentencing Trust, describes the destructive effects of
Maori tribalism, and the weekly poll asks NZCPR readers whether the
abolition of the Maori seats would make a difference to the country.
On Tuesday international "race relations day" - a
day to promote the elimination of racial discrimination - will be
celebrated by schools from all over the country.
In New Zealand,
the foundation for racial equality was laid with the Treaty of Waitangi. Under
Article One of the Treaty, Maori ceded their sovereignty to the Queen. Under
Article Two, property rights were established. And under Article Three, all New
Zealanders were given equality under British Law. (An excellent analysis of the
Treaty of Waitangi by Hon Sir Apirana
Ngata is available exclusively
through the NZCPR >>>)
It remains a puzzle, however, that in a country where it is unlawful to
discriminate on the basis of race, racism is being actively encouraged by the
government. Racial discrimination by the state has fuelled deep divisions
within New Zealand
society. The existence of the Maori seats exacerbates the problem.
According to the Electoral Commission, when the 1985 Royal Commission on the
Electoral System considered the future of the Maori seats, it concluded that
"the seats had not helped Maori and that they would achieve better
representation through a proportional party-list system". The Commission
therefore recommended that if MMP was adopted, "the Maori seats should be
abolished".
Nowadays, as they predicted, Maori representation in Parliament has
increased through the party-list system. As a result a majority of New
Zealanders now believe that the Maori seats are redundant and should be
abolished. The National Party recently announced that it would tie the
abolition of the Maori seats to the conclusion of the Waitangi Treaty claims
process in 2014.
That brought a predictable response from the Maori Party - which depends on
the Maori seats for its survival. Hone Harawira warned that a promise to
abolish the Maori seats could compromise post-election arrangements:
"We won't be doing deals with parties who plan to silence our peoples'
views. It took us 150 years for our voice to be heard in the halls of power,
and our people won't stand for anyone trying to take it away again. Political
parties may be pushing for deadlines on lodging claims, but they shouldn't for
one minute think that settling claims for less than 3% of their value means
that Maori will accept having their independent voice in parliament choked off
at the same time".
It is these increasing demands by radical Maori that have fuelled the racial
divide. Tribalism is a primitive culture that modern societies have shunned.
A recent study by Paul
Hamer for Te Puni Kokiri,
highlights this fact. Back in 1966, one in fifty Maori lived in Australia. Today it is one in six! Increasing
numbers of Maori are leaving New Zealand
for Australia, not only to
take advantage of the opportunities provided by higher living standards and a
more buoyant economy, but to also escape the negative effects of racism and
tribalism.
In his report Paul
Hamer describes how many Maori in Australia welcome being regarded as
"Kiwis" - 'New Zealanders' first and Maori second. Many expressed
their overwhelming sense of relief of being "free of Maori culture",
of being able to "get away from the rigid beliefs of our elders", of
being "away from tikanga Maori and whanau dynamics or pressures associated
with being whanau".
Others spoke of being able to escape the whanau environment after years of
being in it, living it, breathing it, eating it, without even realising it:
"you know the story marae, whanau hui, whanau politics, continuously
fighting each other but still whanau in the end".
Kelly Te Heuheu, the National
Maori Crime Issues Specialist for the Sensible Sentencing Trust, is this week's
NZCPR Guest commentator. In her opinion piece "Grief, Pain & Division
of our People over Maori
Land and Tribal
Politics", Kelly shares a similar
experience:
"Since early childhood, I remember the punch-ups and arguments between
our people over land and tribal politics. The worst issue with Maori Land
is most of it is in multiple ownership which is disastrous. For the children
playing around the Marae we got used to this fighting as the norm of our
lifestyle. Many of our people moved away from home due to friction and
fighting. Families broke up, the feud lasted for many years - sometimes a
lifetime".
She explains, "Even worse, animosity goes down through generations like
a plague. Grief, pain and division between whanau (family), hapu (sub tribe)
and iwi (tribe) over land and tribal politics is so bad that many of our people
distance themselves from our culture". (To read Kelly's
article click the sidebar link>>>)
This need to distance themselves from Maori culture is clearly a factor in
driving many Maori to Australia.
One survey respondent put it this way:
"It is paramount that the New Zealand
government begins to recognise that Maori are achieving and are successful when
living away from New Zealand,
and they have to begin asking themselves why is this not happening in New Zealand?
To oppress a people and manipulate politics to achieve their own means will
only see more and more Maori recognising that they do have a future and they
can be successful and live in a flash house, and drive a flash car, and have a
healthy bank account and still retain their Maoriness - unfortunately they have
to leave New Zealand to do it".
It is a sad fact that while most Maori do very well in Australia, government policy at home keeps Maori
down. Running a country with economic policies that reduce living standards,
means that many families will never enjoy the benefits of a decent income.
Having an education system that forces children to go to failing state schools,
means that many children from poor families totally miss out on the benefits of
a good education. Keeping families dependent on welfare, robs hope, and results
in many turning to booze, drugs and crime.
New Zealanders should not have to live under laws that foster failure. Nor
should we - Maori and non-Maori - have to live under laws that foster racism.
The vast majority of New Zealanders want laws that treat us equally and treat
us well - laws that allow us all to succeed and prosper. Tribalism and
separatism do not do that.
I will leave the last word to Alan Duff,
from an article "Maori Underperformance" that he wrote for the NZCPR
last year:
To continue with the collective, whanau, hapu, iwi societal model is a fatal
mistake. A fatal mistake. For in not developing individuality we continue down
the declining slope of anonymity in a collective. Of no-one willing to make
decisions - especially unpopular decisions - for fear of standing out from the
crowd, going against the collective will. Individuality is as fundamental to a
society's development as property rights.
The quality of debate in this country on Maori issues is poor, cowardly,
non-analytical, and none of it serves the Maori people well. You see we're
having thrust upon us, rammed down our throats in fact, this "Maori as we
were" model (before, it is implied, the Europeans came along and ruined us
morally and culturally). Its advocates are insisting that we think differently
- yes, we do, but it shouldn't be assumed we can't change, not if the same
thinking is holding us back from advancing - we have a different world view, we
have greater difficulties adapting to Western culture. So just give us the
money and we'll figure out the solutions to our own problems. When demonstrably
we can't. Why not? Because our base line is a Stone Age societal model which
patently does not work in this modern world. When are we as a nation, starting
with government, going to say "enough is enough."?
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