pn393 |
I can remember Mary Boyd, bless her,
my masterate history lecturer in the late 1960s echoing the statement that the Treaty of Waitangi was not worth the paper it was
written on, and Dick Scott's book on Parihaka on the slopes of what was then Mt Egmont (now Taranaki) of
which one reviewer wrote:
The story of Parihaka is a long and bitter one, characterised on one side by the dignity of the Maori leaders Te Whiti and Tohu and the patient determination of the many tribes associated with Parihaka; and on the other by the violent land-grabbing of the Pakeha, supported by a racist government and one-eyed courts. – Anthony Ward
Te Whiti o Rongomai
My Taranaki born-and-bred
former father-in-law said he'd prefer his daughter to marry a Maori
“off the street” than any Pakeha, meaning me.
I can remember a young
Otaki College colleague telling his students that Ngati Toa, and not
the New Zealand Company, were responsible for the deaths in the
Wairau Affair (then called the Wairau Massacre) when the latter's claim to the land was, to say the least, dubious and when they sought to forestall Land Commisssioner William Spain's enquiries by occupying the land and presenting him with a fait accompli.*
I can remember when Syd and Hannah Jackson and Nga Tama Toa in the early days of the “Maori
Renaissance” and when grass-skirted Auckland University engineering
students lampooning the haka on graduation day.
It also does not seem that
long ago when RNZ broadcast only ten minutes of Te
Reo a week.
Or when the police stormed Maori at Bastion Point and none asked why Ngati Whatua had staged their months' long sit-in. When there were police night raids on Pasifika, but no other, overstayers. And when our All Blacks engaged with the Springboks, despite their demand there be no Maori players, and the protests that followed .... and Eva Rickard's hekenga.
Reo a week.
Or when the police stormed Maori at Bastion Point and none asked why Ngati Whatua had staged their months' long sit-in. When there were police night raids on Pasifika, but no other, overstayers. And when our All Blacks engaged with the Springboks, despite their demand there be no Maori players, and the protests that followed .... and Eva Rickard's hekenga.
And so, to today, when many
Maori and Pakeha are calling for greater knowledge of our history.
St Albans Church, Pauatahanui |
Many of our local geographies are part of our national histories.
Owning Our History
This week's NZ
Listener, May 25-31, has an
article by Sally Blundell “Owning Our History” sub-titled “Calls
are growing for us to take a more honest look at our past,
particularly the wars over power and land that shaped our country.”
She relies heavily on Wellington historian Vincent O'Malley. Here
are some paraphrased extracts:
Between
the Wairau Affair (until recently called the Wairau Massacre)
in 1842 and the attacks on Te Kooti/Te Turuki, portrayed as “a
violent rebel and a religious fanatic”, near Lake Waikaremoana in
1873, at least 6,000 people had died, and nearly 1.5 million hectares
of Maori land became Pakeha land. New Zealand's “social, economic and political
landscape (was) changed forever.” Yet little of this is stored in the nation's memory.
The site of the battle at Orakau, (our equivalent to America's
Gettyburg) south of Hamilton, has a road running through it; and the
battle ground at Gate Pa near Tauranga is accessed through Cameron
Road, named after the General who destroyed it.
King Tawhiao |
King Tawhiao escaped south to a swarth of country later named the “King Country” The battle opened up the Waikato for paheka settlement and General Cameron was knighted.
General Sir Duncan Cameron |
Later, State Highway 1 cut though the site but in 2009 a bypass was constructed to allow the redevelopment of the batle site.
Yet,
says O'Sullivan. “we barely talk of (these sites or events).
Commemorations are few, many of the war sites are degraded and
unmarked, the myth of chivalrous and noble battle, sowing seeds for
the 'best race relations in the world' has been shattered.
"Today, students can go through school without learning any New Zealand history... which is staggering to me.
"This is our history. It
happened here, in this place, relatively recently, and it had
profound consequences for what New Zealand would become. These were
defining conflicts of New Zealand history and, as a nation, we need
to take ownership of them.”
The
History Teachers' Association petition has over 3,000 signatures. It
seeks to make compulsory “the coherent teaching of our own past
across appropriate year levels in our school” but —to date—our
government that talks so much about an “inclusive” New Zealand,
has not been supportive.
Education Minister Chris Hipkins acknowledges some schools could do more to teach about the New Zealand wars (once called the Maori wars) but he does not favour making it compulsory.
So, most students soon to be adults, will continue to be ignorant about the wars — and everything else in our history.
Education Minister Chris Hipkins acknowledges some schools could do more to teach about the New Zealand wars (once called the Maori wars) but he does not favour making it compulsory.
So, most students soon to be adults, will continue to be ignorant about the wars — and everything else in our history.
O'Malley, however,
is optimistic. He thinks we have now “turned the corner” as a
nation, and more people are wanting greater engagement with out
history.
“Making sure our kids learn this history and looking after these (battle sites) is not going to bankrupt the nation … now more than ever we need to know this history and be honest with ourselves.”
“Making sure our kids learn this history and looking after these (battle sites) is not going to bankrupt the nation … now more than ever we need to know this history and be honest with ourselves.”
* I wrote about the Wairau Affair in the PPTA Journal in February 1970, pp 26-27.
--ACW
What
some have said about the books mentioned
Vincent
O'Malley
The Great War for New
Zealand:Waikato 1800-2000. 2016.
Vincent O’Malley’s work in regard to the Waikato Wars brings to life the ancestors of New Zealand history. He shines a spotlight on a dark period of our collective past and brings it into a modern conversation for the consideration of New Zealand’s future. Rahui Papa, Chairman, Te Arataura, Waikato-Tainui
Across this nation, there are defining moments in our history. The Waikato Wars changed the face of Aotearoa New Zealand and most significantly the lives and wellbeing of Waikato-Tainui through the confiscation of lands. It is a story that must be told, must not be forgotten and must be shared in the living rooms of all New Zealanders for our future generations. This rich account by Vincent O’Malley strikes out to do that – E te rangatira, teenei te whakaaro nui ki a koe. Parekawhia McLean, Ngaati Mahanga, Waikato-Tainui, Ngaati Maniapoto
Vincent
O'Malley
The New Zealand Wars:
Nga Pakanga o Aotearoa. 2019.
‘I believe Vincent O'Malley's research will be the single most important historical body of work produced in my lifetime. Finally we have a narrative which carefully weaves both the accounts of the British Colonial government with those of hapū rangatira. While not all New Zealanders are ready to confront our past, this work will serve as a taonga for future generations. He mahi taipari whakarewa waka ngā whakaaro tēnei.’
Mihingarangi Forbes, journalist
‘This book should be core curriculum for all New Zealanders . . . With every page, O’Malley exposes the nation’s deep wounds to the light and applies the healing balm of truth. I really wish this book had been available when I was studying New Zealand history at high school!’
Arama Rata, University of Waikato
James
Bellich
The New Zealand Wars
and the Victorian Interpretation of Racial Conflict, 1986. Reprinted
2015.
James Belich’s book is a tour de force. In a brilliant new analysis, he demolishes the received wisdom of the course and outcome of the new Zealand Wars . . . explains how we came by the version and why it is all wrong, and substitutes his own interpretation. It is a vigorous and splendidly stylish contribution to our historiography. – the New Zealand Listener
This is not just a good book. It is a remarkable book. – Professor Keith Sinclair
◙ For Bellich's excellent five-part
televised series on the wars, click here.
Dick
Scott
Ask that Mountain: the
Story of Parihaka. 1975;
reprinted 2008.
Honorary Dr Dick Scott:
|
Sep 28, 2011 Alan rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
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