Sunday, February 12, 2012

Blame

Yesterday, a person I follow on Twitter drew my attention to an article by Paul Holmes that appeared in the NZ Herald on Saturday.   Holmes is ranting on about Waitangi Day and calling it repugnant and a waste of time - amongst other things.

The tweeter was appalled at Holmes' gall, and had to read the article 'three times' because he was so full of disbelief that anyone could write anything so 'racist.'    Certainly Holmes uses plenty of strong and emotive language, but I suspect he's saying what a lot of people actually think.   And are maybe too scared to say because of an invariable backlash.

I had a bit of a debate about the subject with this tweeter, and didn't really get anywhere - although at least, after an initial possibility that there might be angry words between us, we managed to maintain a reasonably respectful tone.  However, there wasn't going to be any change of mind.  What Holmes was saying was rubbish, according to this person, and basically the Maori are still being treated badly by Pakeha in New Zealand.

It seems to me we've progressed, in our history, from a state of Maori bad/Pakeha good, to Maori good/Pakeha bad.   The initial state wasn't right, but it came in a time of colonialism, and was by no means uncommon.  It took us some time to get past it.   Nevertheless, within that, there were many good things, not least the understanding by some Pakeha that the Maori people had a great deal to offer, and the understanding by some Maori that the Pakeha also had a great deal to offer.

In our present state, the Maori have turned themselves into 'victims.'   Everything that's wrong is the fault of someone else.  (When I say 'the Maori' of course I'm talking about those who want to think this way; there are plenty who don't, many of them now living in Australia!)  The problem is, when you make yourself a victim, or behave as if you are one, someone else has to become the 'oppressor', whether they like it or not.  The victim approach automatically turns the other into the person to blame for all that's wrong in their world.

I'm not saying that everything that Pakeha do is right; by no means.  Much of what those in leadership do affects everybody in the country, not just the Maori.  Much of what leadership do or has done has been opposed by the whole population, to no avail.

But continuing down our present path will not aid the country as a whole.  Somehow we've got to get to a point where we think: Maori good/Pakeha good.  Any other variation on this will just keep on leading us into a blind alley.

2 comments:

Blair D said...

Indeed Mike I agree. I think even the Waitangi settlements in time will become further cause for grievance because there are always conditions on these and the idea of full and final settlement cannot apply when Te Tiriti o Waitangi is seen as a "living document". If that's the case then the interpretation of it is always open to change and obviously that leaves the door open to new claims on the grounds of new grievance.

What I feel so strongly about is that Te Tiriti o Waitangi is an agreement between the Crown and Maori and yet the principles (a later construct imposed upon the treaty)are required to be applied at every level of government activity no matter how remote to the Crown. I was pleased to hear today that the Maori Party had agreed that the requirements of the Treaty could not be imposed upon private companies that may invest is state assets. This I felt was a small victory because this was never the intention of the signing of the treaty.

To be honest and I never thought I would say this to become a republic would do away with a lot of this difficulty because the Crown would cease to exist as we know it in our legislature today. That would make for interesting times.

Mike Crowl said...

Thanks, Blair...good to feel I'm not alone in thinking the Treaty isn't quite the document for every occasion it's made out to be.