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Guerillas in the mist

5:00AM Saturday October 20, 2007
By Catherine Masters  and Patrick Gower


Members of the Taneatua Mongrel Mob say there are no terrorist camps in the Ureweras - the area is used for hunting camps. Photo / Alan Gibson

In Ruatoki this week a hui was held at a marae with a plaque out front which perhaps sums up 150 years of Tuhoe relations with white authority.

There's nothing bad written on the plaque. In fact, it's the opposite, and that may be a surprise given the level of anger in this tight-knit community.

The plaque commemorates one of the last great paramount chiefs, Takarua Tamarau, who died in 1958 aged 86. It reads: "Tamarau was a protector and guide to his Maori people and a loyal supporter of the British flag."

The memorial at little Otenuku Marae, the last of the many marae which dot Ruatoki Valley Rd was erected by the Commonwealth Covenant Church "in high personal esteem and as a token of arohanui between the Maori and Pakeha peoples".

But in one fell swoop on Monday the police - say Tuhoe people - badly wounded those relationships.

At the hui, Maori police liaison officers, who locals say were left out of the loop about the massive police operation, were having to explain why armed police descended on this tiny town of only a few hundred people in such force. Locals believe they were treating an entire community as criminals in their hunt for a few.

People say they saw a sniper leaning out of a circling helicopter as heavily armed police blocked off the only two roads in, scaring children and making young and old stand in front of their vehicles holding a number in front of them so criminal-style mugshots could be taken.

At the marae, media gathered for the hui and it appeared some Maori press were allowed on to the grounds but not Pakeha.

When people spilled out of the marae after emotional talks, media invaded the grounds. Most Tuhoe ignored the protocol gaffe but one woman was yelling "you Pakeha ones, get out of the gate".

She may have seemed aggressive but she was right, said a Maori member of the media. No one, Maori or Pakeha, should have gone on to the marae uninvited.

Another blunder by Pakeha. And people here say there were some big blunders made by police.

When they descended, one of the main roadblocks was set up at what is known as the confiscation line.

This is where, in the 1860s, Tuhoe were left on one side and all the land on the other was taken and given to settlers.

This followed the scorched earth policy where British soldiers invaded Tuhoe territory in the bitter cold of winter, burning crops, pillaging, murdering and leaving the people to starve.

The historic injustice has not healed. Only two years ago, Tuhoe painted bodies on the ground at the confiscation line in a re-enactment for Waitangi Tribunal members who came to town to hear their treaty claims, among them a constitutional claim to govern themselves according to their own customs.

Tuhoe have always been steadfast: they say they never signed the Treaty of Waitangi and they never gave up their sovereignty.

The day after the hui Tamati Kruger's fish and chips are getting cold as he talks about the past and how the police action this week has affected the people, once again.

Kruger is a kaumatua, historian and teacher, and is highly respected. He has spent the day at a district health board meeting on which he is a Crown appointee. He now sits in a bright orange T-shirt at the Te Kohati A Tuhoe office, tired from the past days' events, yet talking eloquently about the long and troubled history between Tuhoe and the Crown.

The tyranny continues today, he says.

He thinks placing the blockade at the confiscation line was not intentional. But it is significant.

"It's like history in cycles, isn't it? Yeah, it's history repeating. That probably goes over the top of the head of the police commissioner. One party remembers, one party forgets."

Tuhoe have been saddened that the police commissioner did not use the police Maori liaison staff.

At the hui, says Kruger, the liaison officers kept their eyes down when a speaker swore at them for being slaves of the white man.

"The speaker said 'you have no mana at all, don't you see that ?' and they just sat there. We could all feel their embarrassment and disappointment."

In another piece of history repeating itself, the liaison officers who fronted at the hui were not Tuhoe but from tribes whose ancestors were Crown sympathisers and helped lead the soldiers into Tuhoe land.

The symbolism is important. Children are raised with strong oral traditions about the injustices of the past and on Monday Tuhoe believe they saw it for themselves in 2007.

For some reason, there is an automatic heavy-handedness used by the Crown when it deals with Tuhoe, says Kruger.

He thinks this is because Tuhoe have always been quarrelsome, whether about national or local politics or the fact people refuse to register their dogs on their own land.

"I guess if you draw those things together it paints a picture of contempt and disrespect for the Crown and its authority; we question it all the time, we mock it and we jeer at it because we don't believe that they have authority in our rohe [iwi territory]."

There will be long-term impacts from this latest conflict, he says.

The Crown's apparent attitude - that Tuhoe are belligerent and stubborn people who need to be dragged into the 21st century - will be entrenched.

But also entrenched will be Tuhoe people's pride and determination to be more Tuhoe "in every way possible".

Ruatoki is not far from Whakatane but as you pass through neighbouring Taneatua where the one-man police station is located, you enter a different world.

The houses are faded and many have horses grazing in the back yard. Dogs wander around without collars or tags.

Some of the faces you see are fully tattooed. Not all are welcoming but people are mostly friendly when approached.

They are like anyone else, they say. They might live more simply but they do their chores, tend their horses and sometimes ride them into the hills to go hunting. The grass is green and lush and across the river where the valley flattens out a road, seemingly going nowhere, leads to tiny enclaves of homes, marae and schools and well-tended fields of asparagus.

Towering around Ruatoki are the Ureweras, covered in mist, the mystical mountain range full of history and importance to Tuhoe.

And it is the Ureweras that are said to link all the people arrested around the country this week with some kind of connection to a military or possibly terrorist organisation.

From Tuhoe, police have arrested one of their most often arrested activists, Tame Iti, who is still in custody.

There are key questions people out here do not understand. One is why their entire community was made to feel like criminals whereas other raids - in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch - were targeted at individual houses.

The police knew who they were after in Ruatoki so why didn't they just target individuals? Many said all they needed to do if they wanted Iti was to ask him to call into the police station. Iti's personality is such that he would have. Instead, he and others were raided in the early hours while the community was asleep.

People can't comment about the charges Iti faces but they point out it's no secret in these parts, where everyone has rifles for hunting, that he has a semi-automatic weapon. He brings it out at tangis in front of hundreds of people, including an out-of-town police officer at the last one.

As to molotov cocktails, most people say they have no idea about that. But there is no petrol station in either Ruatoki or Taneatua and people store petrol in all kinds of containers.

Despite the sense of unease, life in the two communities seems to have returned to normal after the raids, except for the presence of numerous police cars.

As the Taneatua Bowling Club is hosting an interclub tournament, one street away young men wearing red hang around outside a house. One wears a hat, leather waistcoat and checked pants. Another has a red T-shirt twisted around his head. The Mongrel Mob rules in Ruatoki and Taneatua, and the men are friendly.

They're laughing their heads off at the thought of hunters from Auckland encountering a group of armed men in military camouflage in the Ureweras and getting so scared they told the police.

"That's where they train our young fellas to use the taiaha up there. Aucklanders, they come from the city and assume ... "

Of course people have guns at taiaha training - "If you run into a big pig you're gonna need a gun."

As for talk of military camps, "Those are hunting camps. We were all laughing at that. There's camps all the way up, they've been there for years, way before our dads and our koro."

The Ureweras are their freezer, they say.

"If you can't afford to go to Pak'N Save, you go up there."

The taiaha training could look scary, for sure. The young man in the waistcoat described a course he went on: "You get up at six in the morning and you run naked through the river 'cause it numbs your body and then you get up on to the hill and that's when they start whacking you with the sticks.

"You know, it just toughens you up. If you get whacked there you don't flinch, it's just whack, whack, whack."

Iti takes courses like this, they say. He knows every Maori weapon and teaches how to use them. Yes, that could be a bit freaky for a hunter from Auckland to see, but "you're lucky they weren't running around with no pants on".

There are no terrorist or military camps up there, the boys say. Ruatoki and Taneatua are small inter-related places and if something like that was going on, people would have known. If there was a blast, it was probably someone's gas cooker exploding, they laugh.

They reckon that even the local police officer, who is "a good pig" knew nothing about any of this and he's from these parts.

At the pub in Taneatua there is only one drinker. He's 69 and lives in Ruatoki. He says police did some door-to-door visiting of houses, not to ask questions but to explain their actions. He thinks the visit was by way of an apology, for which he's glad.

He did not think Maori-Pakeha relations would be badly affected - because they've always been bad.

He talks of the importance of the Ureweras and how Tuhoe tradition has always been for young people to go up there to learn about their background, their history, and their connection to various parts of the land and to where the ancestors lived.

Pakeha may not understand, he says, but this is Tuhoe custom.

The man at the pub is calm, almost bemused, but the anger levels vary. At the dairy across from the police station, a big Maori man with a tattooed face pulls up and yells at police "We're alright, there's no **** al Qaeda here, you idiots, go home."

As he drives off toward Ruatoki some laughing little boys spot the back window of his car is smashed out and crack up.

"Look at his window, he's got Maori air conditioning," one says and they all convulse with laughter.

Just little kids laughing. But some children caught up in the operation weren't laughing on Monday. They were frightened at the sight of men dressed head to toe in black like ninjas, waving weapons around.

For the woman who kicked off yesterday's march by kohanga reo and school children to the Whakatane Police Station, it isn't funny.

Mere Nuku, licensee of Tawhaki Kohanga Reo in Ruatoki, had been driving to work in Whakatane on Monday and was ordered out of her car. She thinks she was the third to leave town that morning because she was made to stand in front of her car holding a white card with the number three on it.

She organised the march yesterday because children had been frightened and no one knew the long-term effects of what they had seen that day.

Kohanga reo teaches children to go to the police when they need to. Now, she says, children are scared of the police.

It was a peaceful morning in the valley on Monday, she says. It was the police who brought the violence in.

As we speak, tears suddenly form in Nuku's eyes. "You can only say: when is it going to stop?"

History repeats for Tuhoe

By Patrick Gower

In the remote Waimana Valley, the descendants of Maori prophet Rua Kenana need no reminder of the division a police raid can have on the Tuhoe people.

It is 91 years since the unarmed Rua was arrested at Maungapohatu by an armed force of 70 constables who killed two Maori in a subsequent gunfight, the worst clash between police and a Maori community that century.

The Herald visited Rua's grave this week and found his relatives and present-day followers angry at the parallels between his treatment and that received by their tribespeople on Monday in the neighbouring Ruatoki valley.

Their collective message: 91 years is not enough time to forget, let alone be scarred again.

Rua's great-grandaughter Tangi Munn said the Government needed to think about whether the latest raids had solved problems or caused them.

The similarities with the fatal raid on Rua were "overwhelming".

"Seventy police went in to get my koro back then, and 70 police went in to Ruatoki," she said. "It solved nothing then, and from what I am hearing from our people, it will solve nothing now."

Rua believed himself to be the successor to warrior and religious leader Te Kooti and gained a popular following after setting himself up as a New Testament-style prophet at the turn of the century.

He wanted the return of Maori land to Maori and to remove the Tuhoe people from Pakeha influence. He clashed with the prime minister of the time and became a political embarrassment - leading to a crackdown on him that included trumped-up charges.

This culminated in the 1916 shootings at at Maungapohatu, which began after a shot was fired as he was arrested - initially blamed on Maori, although historical argument now says it was the police themselves.

"The police were found wrong then, but they never admitted it," Munn said. "What scares me is that they were different times. We are in the 21st century now and as a country we should be beyond all this."

Munn did not believe that the "hocus-pocus up in the bush" police were describing was true. Camps and bushcraft were Tuhoe tradition, and New Zealanders should not be concerned. If some "silly buggers" had taken it too far, it was unfair an entire community had to be targeted for the actions of a few.

Munn said though the campaign against Rua had targeted him directly, "these police raids are hitting and hurting all of Tuhoe, and all Maori".

Similar feeling were expressed throughout the 20km valley which has a blockade at the bottom to stop American forestry company Rayonier coming in.

A man drew a long screwdriver in a threatening manner when the Weekend Herald approached.

Signs declare you are entering the "Tuhoe Nation" and visitors are allowed only as a "courtesy".

The council is refused access here in relation to the dispute and many residents refuse to pay rates let alone register their dogs or get firearms licenses.

The upper reaches of the valley has a 10-student Maori language school, four maraes and 40 homes.

There is little to mark Rua's grave, just a concrete tomb behind his final home at Matahi.

Munn works as a Maori spiritual healer and has set up the Te Wairua Ote Ora Trust in Waimana. She is a descendant of Rua by his first wife Pinepine, with whom he had 17 children. He had 10 wives in total.

Munn said Rua had predicted the complexities of modern life Maori would come to face, and advised his followers not lose touch with their Maoritanga. She believed Rua would be disconcerted by the way many Maori lived their lives today away from their land, family and traditions.

He had always believed that Maori and Pakeha could live harmoniously side-by-side, but that the colonists should not act as if Maori were there to be "tamed".

Munn said Rua would be worried about the events of this week, but would have a simple message for his people. "He would be saying: "no matter how things are, love one another and love your enemies. Find strength in yourselves."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10471026&pnum=0
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Q & A: Who are the Tuhoe people?

5:00AM Thursday October 18, 2007
By James Ihaka

The Tuhoe iwi descend from two groups known as Nga Potiki and Hapu Oneone. They lived in Te Urewera before the arrival of the great Maori migration from Hawaiki.

The descendants of the Mataatua waka cohabited with these peoples upon their arrival around 1300.

Tuhoe Potiki is the eponymous ancestor of the tribe. He was embroiled in political struggles and fought several battles throughout his lifetime.

A whakatauki or proverb which summed up the destruction in his lifetime was uttered when Tuhoe decided to retire.

Tuhoe moumou kai, moumou taonga, moumou tangata ki te po.

(Tuhoe extravagant of food, resources and lives.)

Where do they live?
The tribal boundaries extend from Taneatua north towards Whakatane across to Kutarere down to Maungapohatu and Waikaremoana. The tribal area also includes the Whirinaki, Minginui, Te Whaiti and Waiohau areas and Te Urewera National Park.

How many Tuhoe are there?
About 45,000 in New Zealand and abroad - at least 5000 live in Australia. The average age is about 28. More than 80 per cent of all Tuhoe live outside their ancestral lands.

Are Tuhoe signatories to the Treaty of Waitangi?
Tuhoe historian and lecturer Tamati Kruger said the iwi was never petitioned to sign. Trader James Ferdab, who was asked to take copies of the Treaty to the people, was told he would be wasting his time and his life could be in danger by going to the area.

Mr Kruger said it would have been a waste of time because copies of the Treaty were bought to the area in late May after Governor William Hobson declared New Zealand was a colony of Great Britain.

Ferdab began collecting signatures one week after this declaration and in 28 days he had collected 26 signatures from the coastal tribes of the Eastern Bay of Plenty except Tuhoe.

How is the iwi's relationship with the Crown?
Mr Kruger describes it as "weak". He said Tuhoe came to the attention of the Crown in the 1860s when they fought alongside other Maori against government forces in the Waikato.

Mr Kruger says Tuhoe were wrongly implicated in the death of Rev Karl Volkner in Opotiki in the early 1860s and were punished by the Crown for supporting fugitive Te Kooti.

The Crown moved in on Tuhoe lands destroying cultivations, burning houses and imprisoning people suspected of insurgency and confiscated lands. Mr Kruger said there were never any court cases over the Crown's allegations and charges were not proven.

Famous Tuhoe activists
Rua Kenana claimed to be a prophet who wanted to remove the Tuhoe people from European influence. He established a community at Maungapohatu in Te Urewera, which included a bank and a two-storeyed temple.

Tame Iti has had a long involvement in protest. He has participated in land occupations and adopted techniques such as setting up a tent outside Parliament and calling it the Maori embassy to New Zealand.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=252&objectid=10470601
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A brief history of Tuhoe

By RUTH LAUGESEN - Sunday Star Times | Sunday, 21 October 2007

Activist Tame Iti's iwi is renowned for its staunch independence, as well as its path of isolation and harrowing loss.

Tuhoe people, says Maori broadcaster Willie Jackson, radiate toughness.

"They are known for their staunchness, around the Maori language, about their land," says Jackson, who is related by marriage to Tuhoe activist Tame Iti.

"You know straight away when Tuhoes are in town, or working for you. Their Tuhoetanga is so prominent; there's a certain pride. They just exude it," he says.

The tribe, immortalised in Elsdon Best's 1925 history Children of the Mist, have a mystique as powerful as the remote and rugged Urewera region that is their home ground. But now, in the wake of allegations of a series of armed training camps in the Urewera, the tribe is gaining a new notoriety, with headlines such as "Guerrillas in the Mist".

Such talk is nonsense, says Jackson. But he says there is something special about this tribe who, for longer than any other iwi, stayed out of the reach of colonial control and British cultural influence.

Even today, children growing up in the remote valley of Ruatoki, where Iti has a property, see the world through a distinct cultural lens.

"It's one of the last areas where, if you meet someone from Ruatoki, nine times out of 10 you expect them to be a Maori speaker. They come out to the cities and come across Maori who haven't had the language for a couple of generations," says Jackson.

Tuhoe people led the national Maori language renaissance, says Jackson, and Tuhoe broadcasters were at the forefront when the first Maori radio and television services were launched.

Tuhoe staunchness crops up in other ways too. Starting about a decade ago, some began calling themselves members of the "Tuhoe Nation". Such sentiments are strongest in the Urewera area, where a small minority of Tuhoe's 33,000 still live. The rest have scattered around New Zealand and into Australia in search of economic opportunity.

In Tuhoe land though, signs mark the borders. The reason for talk of nationhood, says Tamati Kruger, head of Tuhoe's treaty negotiations team, is that an iwi is indeed a nation, not a tribe. Does that mean it has its own borders, should collect taxes, have its own defence force and even a seat at the UN? Indeed, says Kruger. "Those would be seen as the characteristics of nationhood," he says.

But Matt Te Pou, who led some of the Tuhoe claims before the Waitangi Tribunal in 2005, says Tuhoe are not a state within a state. Tuhoe nationhood is "just a statement that we know our borders".

"I went to Vietnam and fought under the (New Zealand) flag and saw my mates die. I have no difficulties with the flag. I felt hurt when people shot at it on the ground," he says, referring to Iti's much replayed shooting of the New Zealand flag during the tribunal hearings.

He says the iwi's economic future lies in gaining a treaty settlement. The tribunal report was due early next year, but has since been delayed. It should provide a basis for negotiating a settlement.

THE REPUTATION of Tuhoe for a strong sense of self has a long history. The lasting impression Elsdon Best left is that the children of the mist had chosen to remain apart in their impregnable mountains. But Best did his research at the turn of the 19th century, when Tuhoe had already been through a cataclysm. The Ureweras were always a refuge in an area bristling with competing tribes. But Crown confiscations had left Tuhoe more isolated, marginalised and hemmed in.

This cataclysm began unfolding in 1865, when Anglican priest Rev Carl Volkner was killed at Opotiki by locals from the Te Whakatohea tribe. At the instigation of Kereopa Te Rau, from Taranaki, Volkner was hanged, before his eyes were scooped out and eaten.

Tuhoe had nothing to do with the killing, but Te Rau fled to the Ureweras and Tuhoe were accused of involvement. The government reaction was overwhelming. In 1866 181,000ha of land was confiscated by the government from Tuhoe, Te Whakatohea and Ngati Awa. Ultimately, Tuhoe lost 5700ha on their northern border. The Crown took Tuhoe's only substantial flat land and their only access to the coast. This was most of their fertile, cropping land, and the pathway to rich sources of kaimoana in the sea.

The Tuhoe people were left with harsh, more difficult land, setting the scene for later famines.

Tuhoe were left with "encircled lands", in the words of historian Judith Binney in her evidence to the Waitangi Tribunal.

Even now, the confiscation line looms large for the locals. Kruger says when driving past it feels to him "like it would if you had to travel every day past a point where your family was murdered".

It was inside the Tuhoe side of the line that police chose to set up their roadblock last Monday, prompting outrage among the locals.

But the 1866 confiscations were only the beginning. Tuhoe's isolation and loss was to intensify. Two years later the Maori leader Te Kooti and his followers began what Michael King has called "the most effective guerrilla war ever waged in this country". Te Kooti killed about 30 Europeans and at least 20 Maori men, women and children in raids on Poverty Bay settlements.

When the government gave chase, Te Kooti took sanctuary in the Ureweras among Tuhoe, provoking a bitter, three-year campaign by the government: "In a policy aimed at turning the tribe away from Te Kooti, a scorched earth campaign was unleashed against Tuhoe; people were imprisoned and killed, their cultivations and homes destroyed, and stock killed or run off. Through starvation, deprivation and atrocities at the hands of the government's Maori forces, Tuhoe submitted to the Crown," says Te Ara, the online encyclopaedia of New Zealand.

Te Kooti was never handed over. But according to Binney, Tuhoe's peace compact with the government accepted Tuhoe as a "self-governing realm" in exchange for Tuhoe's active assistance in the last stages of the colonial war.

By 1872 the chiefs of a governing council made a historic decision to protect themselves from the land-hungry Pakeha. They closed access to their lands. Signposts went up warning strangers, especially Pakeha, not to enter. On the northern confiscation line, one chief, Eru Tamaikoha, put up signs warning "Trespassers will be eaten".

"The encircling boundaries that they proclaimed were intended to enable them to choose who entered their realm, and on what terms," says Binney.

Remarkably, for a time at least, it also looked like the New Zealand government would give Tuhoe a form of independence. The Urewera District Native Reserve Act of 1896 was drawn up by Premier Richard Seddon to allow the Urewera people to be regionally autonomous, in his words a "self-governing" people.

That act "was unique in that it recognised the encircling boundaries of a tribally defined zone in the centre of the North Island," says Binney. "The act was presented as an experiment in tribal self-government; it thus allowed for other possibilities than the discourse of `one nation, one law'."

But as Tuhoe tried to hold the government to its perhaps insincere promise, tragedy was unfolding on a staggering scale. A wave of disease, extreme frosts, crop failures and famine sent Tuhoe reeling. Census figures indicate that between 1896 and 1901, 23% of the Tuhoe population died, says Binney. A high proportion were children under 15. With Seddon's death in 1906, the Tuhoe dream of self-governance that still lives for some today began to be torn down. The Liberal government abandoned attempts at partnership, says Binney, and reverted to the view that a separate Tuhoe "realm" contradicted the uniformity of laws.

There was to be a final crushing of hope. In 1907 the messianic pacifist leader Rua Kenana offered a new path to a people in despair by establishing a "City of God" for around 600, deep within the Ureweras. Trade, agriculture, even banking and mining, were part of his plan.

But the government saw Kenana as subversive, and in 1916 a large military force was sent in to crush him, using minor charges of supplying liquor as a pretext for what historians now consider to be an illegal armed invasion. Kenana was arrested deep in the Ureweras at Maungapohatu by 57 constables from Auckland, and more from Gisborne and Whakatane. Kenana was unarmed, but a shot was fired, and in the resulting gunfight two Tuhoe were killed, including Kenana's son.

Kenana was taken to Auckland and tried for sedition, but was in the end only found guilty of "moral" resistance to arrest. He served an excessive sentence a year's hard labour followed by 18 months' imprisonment. And when police arrived in the Ureweras again last week, the traumatic intrusion of 1916 came alive all over again.

Outside the courthouse in Rotorua, where Tame Iti's bail application was being heard last week, protesters held aloft placards bearing the name Rua Kenana.

According to Bernice Tai, who lives in the Matahi Valley in the Ureweras, Kenana was the last leader Tuhoe had who was able to secure them the economic base to be a nation.

"He was the only one to set about to achieve what the Pakeha have today," she says.

And she says the invoking of the Terrorism Suppression Act last week reminded her people of the Tohunga Suppression Act that was used against Rua Kenana.

"It really pisses me off. It's come to a point where it's shown our people have never assimilated to the system. For the whole 200 years, whatever that they've been here in our faces, trying to assimilate us.

"What is wrong," asks Tai, "with our people achieving what we were from the start? Which was a peaceful, loving people."

http://www.stuff.co.nz/4245702a11.html
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My burbling on child abuse.

Here are some burbling notes i wrote on another forum about the recent child abuse cases featured in mainstream media. One poster was asking me some questions out of what I felt was a genuine interest. As much as I hate playing question and answer time to represent my ethnic group, I answered as well as I was able. I can only ever draw from my own experience, urban maori brought up in a suburb i have no (known) whakapapa too, just a general belief that I am from the East Coast.


Is child abuse purely a Maori (race) problem or does it relate to socio-economic factors?


i agree it's a socio-economic issue, and that maori are over-represented in the lower socio-economic groups. Although i find it pretty hard to reason in cases like these and haven't done any research specifically into child abuse or what goes on behind it.

My gut feeling is that people who do this sort of thing have lost their wairua, you'd have to be a mean-spirited wanker to do torture a toddler. Toddlers are very trying indeed, as I am just beginning to find out, but that's why we have kohanga, playcentres, daycare... there's that old saying that it takes a village to raise a child, and it does, it's best to have them around many carers and helpers who have only the best intentions for your mokopuna.

I've been working with Plunket this year trying to get a music group going for babies. It was intended for Maori mothers, but anyone could go. Out of all the mothers on the Plunket roll, only 1 was showing up.
Yeh that's right, it was me.

Some of the kaiawhina say it's because the maori mothers are all mangere (lazy) and don't want to get off the couch unless beer's involved. I thought about putting free beer on the posters just to get them down there. It makes me wonder if the stereotypes are true... however i have met many Maori parents through kohanga and playcentre that do give a shit about their kids, don't abuse them and treat them well... they all work shit jobs to make ends meet but always have time for their kids and to have input into whanau-led organisations such as kohanga reo.
Domestic violence as a whole bothers me, especially with3 murder-suicides (and one attempted) in this town alone over the last year. I've heard talk that it's cos we raise our men to think they're the business and that women have a lower status than they do. Some guys get a bit carried away with their tikanga maori and think it's their right to trample over others, some others just don't know how to talk or express what's troubling them.


The Gisborne coroner recommended "that community groups help men better relate to their partners"
http://www.gisborneherald.co.nz/article.asp?aid=10320&iid=780&sud=27

That's why it was heart-warming to see this group going in Gisborne
http://www.tmav.org/
Tairawhiti Men Against Violence

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In your opinion, is there absolutely any connection between Maori culture and child abuse?

none whatsoever. If anything it goes against tikanga Maori, because our mokopuna are the continuation of our whakapapa (genealogy). Our whakapapa connects us not just to each other, but to the entire living world and Papatuanuku - the earth we walk upon.

Don't know how many other Maori have this holistic world view, but if you don't know your whakapapa, you have no connectivity with the other people around you and therefore you would see a child as just a walking torture toy i guess.

Even the whole 'warrior culture' thing is a bit of a hit n miss affair. Yeh we were warriors, go on raiding missions in the summer and then in winter we'd return home to tend the crops and celebrate Matariki. It wasn't war all the time...

===

But perhaps you're living in the past a wee bit. I don't know. Perhaps most Maori aren't as traditional as you are, and "Maori culture" has morphed into something completely different.

but you see your comment sums up the difference between maori and pakeha cultures. We don't view time in the same way you do.... we have to know our history so we know where we're going. When people lose their sense of history and whakapapa, they don't know where they're going, who they are... they're just lost and souless - lacking wairua, lacking in their mauri.

Something that occured 20 years ago is just a little while to us, that's one of the reasons the term 'rangatahi' means youth and includes people up to 40 years of age.

Yeh Maori culture, like any other culture, is dynamic and changes. last week for te reo there were people complaining about all the new-fangled words being invented. It seems to me that Maori haven't adapted as well as we could have and to me it's because many have wrongly chosen to forget the important parts of their culture.

I'm not a traditionalist, I'm best described as neo-tribal. I've tried, and keep trying, to find out as much as i can about the ways of my tupuna ancestors, and who my tupuna were. I've found it very beneficial to my wellbeing and believe me i have a lot more kaha (strength) because of it.

As you know i'm a solo mum, which i don't find easy. The things that stop me from turning into a miserable abuse case are that i know my son is the sum of the parts of my ancestors and i, that one day hopefully he will give me beautiful mokopuna and that i have a large whanau to turn to for help.


===


With the last answer I shouldn't have bothered getting defensive about the past and conceded that tikanga maori has changed, that there are some maori who are ignorant of a lot of tikanga. I know I certainly count as one of them in some ways. This is where a history lesson in the urbanisation of maori would help. I think a lot of the underclass stuff is really the asshole end of capitalism showing itself.

Lately in the media there have been a few stories focusing on maori culture, maori prison stats,  and child abuse.

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Chinese may aid Maori

5:00AM Sunday August 19, 2007
By Nicola Shepheard
Professor Margaret Mutu. Photo / Bastiaan Beentjes

Professor Margaret Mutu. Photo / Bastiaan Beentjes

Maori and Chinese should work together to advance their political agendas, says a high profile Maori academic and activist.
Professor Margaret Mutu also says Maori could learn from Chinese how to "get around Pakeha racism".
Mutu will take this message to the Bananas NZ Going Global Conference in Auckland today. The annual conference, organised by the New Zealand Chinese Association, turns the spotlight on New Zealand's Chinese community, which now numbers nearly 150,000.
Mutu, of Ngati Kahu, Te Rarawa and Ngati Whatua, and of Scottish descent, is professor of Maori Studies at Auckland University.
She told the Herald on Sunday she believed that overall, relations have historically been good between Maori and New Zealand Chinese, partly because of a shared experience of Pakeha racism.
"We are both oppressed and discriminated against."
The two cultures shared other similarities, she said, including tribal structures, the promotion of group wellbeing over individual, and the practice of looking after their own.
She claimed Maori ill-feeling toward Chinese is contained to a "very small majority that has jumped on the racist bandwagon, but that's an aberration". Maori with anti-Asian views often had no regular contact with Chinese and were influenced by negative portrayals in the media.
She said the two peoples should "sit down and start discussing the best way through this for our country. Chinese by and large have been able to work their way through from being poverty-stricken... so badly oppressed, and they're now very, very successful businessmen [sic], professionals. They've managed to get themselves into a good economic position... despite the racism. We [Maori] could learn a lot from that, as to how to get around Pakeha racism."
In return, Maori could teach Chinese how to be more politically active and visible.
"They've contributed so much to this country, nobody knows because they don't dare to put their heads above the ramparts."
Maori Party co-leader Tariana Turia yesterday told the Herald on Sunday she agreed that Maori could learn from the Chinese emphasis on education.
She said Maori-Chinese relations had historically been good, as evidenced by inter-marriage, but had deteriorated in recent years.
"Many Maori in the last 20 years have become more and more disconnected even with each other, so I don't think it's unusual they're not building relationships with new migrants," Turia said.
A Massey University report released last month found Maori attitudes to immigration had hardened in recent years. It also showed Maori were far more likely to agree than non-Maori that Chinese, other Asian and Pacific peoples take jobs away from people who were born in New Zealand.
However, Maori were less likely than non-Maori to agree that those groups increase crime rates.
A staunch advocate of Maori indigenous and Treaty rights, Mutu has come under attack in the past for her analyses of Pakeha racism towards Maori.

Link

Well it's about time someone spelt it out.
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UN report on New Zealand race relations

Sunday, 19 August 2007, 12:13 pm
Press Release: Human Rights Commission
Human Rights Commission
Media Release
18 August 2007

Human Rights Commission welcomes UN report on New Zealand race relations
The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination's report on New Zealand's race relations, released today, has been welcomed by the Human Rights Commission.
Race Relations Commissioner Joris de Bres, who attended the Committee's session on New Zealand in Geneva two weeks ago, said the Committee had provided a balanced report card, identifying both areas of significant achievement and issues that were worthy of further discussion within New Zealand.
Mr de Bres said "There will be differing views about some of the issues raised, particularly in relation to constitutional issues, the Treaty and the Waitangi Tribunal, but the Committee's recommendations are just that - issues viewed from an international perspective that can inform discussion within New Zealand."
The report will be discussed at the New Zealand Diversity Forum in Auckland next week, and MPs from major parties have been asked to comment on the recommendations when they address the forum on their parties' race relations policies.
Mr de Bres noted that there were four issues on which the Committee had asked for a report back in 12 months time. These were the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Deletion Bill, the need for renewed dialogue on the Foreshore and Seabed Act, the place of the Treaty in the school curriculum and access to education for all undocumented children (i.e. children without approved immigration status).
"The Commission supports the Committee's recommendations on all four of these issues. We are hopeful that the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Deletion Bill will not proceed, and that the Treaty will be restored as a guiding principle in the school curriculum. We hope that the issue of access to education for undocumented children can be addressed in the context of the Immigration Bill currently before Parliament."
"With regard to the foreshore and seabed, the Commission supports renewed dialogue on the issue, but recognises that this may take time. We told the United Nations that the legislation had produced deep divisions in society, and that the responsibility to heal these lay with all elected representatives, not solely the Government of the day. We said we hoped that in due course means would be found to establish more common ground, given that both Maori and the Crown had expressed a desire to guarantee both public access and Maori customary rights."
For further detail on the CERD Committee's recommendations, see below.
For the Race Relations Commissioner's statement to the CERD committee, click here
For further information contact Joris de Bres on 021 279 0737.
Major Recommendations by the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
The Committee welcomed

* The adoption of the New Zealand Settlement Strategy and National Plan of Action,
* The New Zealand Diversity Action Programme,
* Progress in the reduction of socio-economic disparities with regard to Maori and Pacific communities,
* The significant improvement in the status of the Maori language, and
* The increase in the 2007 Budget for the New Zealand Human Rights Commission.


The Committee recommended that the Government:

* Take steps to implement the New Zealand Action Plan for Human Rights,
* Promote continued public discussion on the constitutional status of the Treaty of Waitangi and its place in legislation,
* Ensure that affected communities participate in any review of targeted policies and programmes, and inform the public about the importance of special measures to ensure equality,
* Ensure that the cut-off date for lodging historical Treaty claims does not unfairly bar legitimate claims,
* Consider granting the Waitangi Tribunal legally binding powers of adjudication and increase funding for the Tribunal,
* Further engage with the Maori community on the foreshore and seabed,
* Include references to the Treaty in the new New Zealand Curriculum,
* Increase efforts to address the over-representation of Maori and Pacific people at every stage of the criminal justice system,
* Ensure that schools are open to all undocumented children,
* Put an end to the detention of asylum-seekers in correctional facilities, and ensure grounds for refusing asylum-seekers are consistent with international standards,
* Collect statistical data on complaints, prosecutions and sentences for racially motivated crimes, and
* Adopt pro-active measures to improve access to procedures for complaints about racial discrimination.

Ends

Link

More info at Peace Movement Aotearoa

Advanced unedited copy of the report

I've downloaded this and will take some time to read through it.
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Tautoko Hone!

I would just like to tautoko Te Tai Tokerau MP Hone Harawira for once again walking the talk.

http://stuff.co.nz/4159085a10.html

Hone the MAN

The veteran protester had advised his hosts to be unified in any opposition, and said he had just come to hear from them.

"To say indigenous people in Aotearoa are going through the same problems in terms of child abuse, and I shared with them what we are trying to do back here," he said.

"I'm not over here to look down my nose at anybody. Far be it from me to say Maori are great and you guys are in serious trouble because we are going through the same things."
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Pakeha Dean Baigent-Mercer explains why he's learning te reo Maori.


A Maori sensibility: He whakatauki
Sunday Star Times | Sunday, 29 July 2007

Pakeha Dean Baigent-Mercer explains why he's learning te reo Maori.

In February I gladly waved goodbye to the stress of Auckland and walked into an entirely different life.

I came to Rawene, a town of 300 people on the Hokianga Harbour, to study te reo Maori for the year.

A good Pakeha mate of mine completed the same fees-free course with Northland Polytechnic two years ago and has been raving about it ever since.

Its strength is that it explores Ngapuhi dialects, tikanga, history, waiata and some kawa (protocol).

"Why do you want to speak te reo?" Maori sometimes ask me with slight suspicion.

"You're studying Maori, why?" Pakeha inquire, "What future job prospects are there in that?"

Money making has never been part of my intention. My initial motivation was to be involved in community land and river care projects in the Far North. Being able to communicate in te reo Maori seemed sensible because Maori make up 41% of the population. And besides, like so many people, it was something I'd thought about doing one day.

But now I'm realising it's so much more. Living in this country and speaking only one language means you experience only half the world. It's now about opening up my world and walking the talk about the Aotearoa I want to live in.

In an interview before the course, tutor Tui Cherrington had told me, "We talk a lot, we sing a lot and we eat a lot." All true.

Half the language I hear these days is in te reo Maori. I am one of three non-Maori out of 91 people studying Ngapuhi Maori at Northland Polytechnic. Here, in Rawene, there are 31 people in two great little Maori classes, aged from 18 to 60.

There are school leavers, parents who have returned from the city, grandparents and great-grandmothers who are taking their reo out of the classroom and into their whanau and community.

Typically, I'd jumped in the deep end again and hadn't realised that the course was taught mostly in Maori.

After the initial anxiety that I wouldn't have a clue what was being said all year, things began to fall into place and began to make a sense of their own. A Maori sensibility.

It's a lot of fun too. An early surprise was humour that mixed sex, cannibalism and Christianity. Collapse )

Link : http://www.stuff.co.nz/4144444a6442.html
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Tairawhiti Men Against Violence

I was at the Kaiti Mall this afternoon and came across this flyer for Tairawhiti Men Against Violence.


Who is Tairawhiti Men Against Violence (TMAV)?
TMAV is a group of guys who are committed to empowering themselves and other men to be great partners, parents, mates and members of the community.
We are not experts just people who care and want to do something to change the way things are.

What does TMAV do?
We meet monthly to update each other and plan things we can do to promote alternatives to violence done by local men and provide encouragement and ideas for guys to be positive parents and partners.
TMAV is not the answer to violence in our community - but is one group of guys interested in doing something practical about the tragedy of male violence in our society.

Who can join TMAV?
Any male living in the Tairawhiti region is welcome to participate in a TMAV meeting or join as a member.
We have some basic rules about respecting each others right to be heard and focusing on the kaupapa for our time together.

How can men get involved with TMAV?
If you would like to meet with other men to discuss and commit to what we can do to help reduce violence in our homes and communities then come along to a TMAV meeting on first Wednesday of every month 7pm at the Men Working for Change rooms (Old Army Hall, Fitzherbert Street, Gisborne).

Website : http://www.tmav.org/

Things like this are good to see.
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Rawiri Taonui's article on Te Reo Maori

This article sums up the recent  history behind the Maori Language better than I ever could.


RAWIRI TAONUI: Uniting kiwiana and kiwitanga
Sunday Star Times | Sunday, 29 July 2007


Strategies and organisations do not save a language for the people. It must be done by the people themselves.

Ko te wiki o te reo Maori he wa ki te whakahau i a tatou (Maori Language Week has been a week to encourage the use of the reo, to celebrate the subtle metaphor and beauty of korero, recognise its place in our unique Maori and New Zealand heritage and appraise its future.)

Te reo is one of 26 Polynesian languages, a subset of the wider Austronesian language group, which -stretching 20,000 years into the past and spanning half the globe, from Madagascar, Taiwan and Malaya, through the Philippines, Indonesia, Micronesia and Melanesia, across the Polynesia Triangle to Aotearoa, Hawaii and Easter Island - was the most widespread language in the world millennia before English obliterated the world indigenous language map.

Te reo has a legacy of loss. Banned in parliament, the courts, hospitals, government departments, local bodies and in church prayer and hymn, teachers beat Maori children for speaking te reo. The 1960 Hunn Report described Maori speakers as backward and retarded. Maori leaders, grandparents and parents, internalising the racist rhetoric of Western superior cultural imperialism, stopped speaking. Inter-generational transmission broke down. The language began to die. Fluent speakers fell from 90% in 1900 to less than 8% by 1980.

Te reo also has a history of recovery. New Zealand can be proud of the spirit with which Maori have fought for their language. Nga Tamatoa delivered the 1972 30,000-strong Maori language petition. Whata Winiata launched Te Whare Wananga o Raukawa. Wainui-o-mata Maori mothers founded the first kohanga reo pre-school. Kura kaupapa followed. A 1986 landmark Waitangi Tribunal report declared te reo Maori a taonga. Te reo became an official language, Te Taurawhiri i Te Reo (the Maori Language Commission) and Te Mangai Paho (the Maori Broadcasting Funding Agency) followed.

We have come a long way. This year's celebrations marked an unprecedented number of initiatives from Maori and Pakeha. Marae, schools, universities, libraries, television, radio and print media ran everything from learn the bilingual national anthem, to day-to-day phraseology, tourism and feel-good personal stories. And fun, too. Politicans doing a quiz didn't know wharepaku meant shithouse, which is odd given they splatter each other with the stuff every day. Collapse )

Link : http://www.stuff.co.nz/4144443a22678.html