Learning the Trick of Standing Upright Here
Stuff recently ran a great series of stories as part of a special project called NZ Made/Nā Nīu Tīreni that included information about every modern Treaty of Waitangi settlement, maps of Māori land loss and explanations about how had this occurred. As
"New Zealand has not done well at grappling with its past. The
unsettling truth about how this country was made is still not well
understood. It has not been adequately taught in our schools. Our
popular culture hasn't reflected it well enough. And our media has
failed to tell it loudly and clearly.
The Treaty of Waitangi, and its subsequent betrayals, is the heart of
how New Zealand was made. We need to reckon with what happened in order
to understand the Treaty settlements process that continues today."
Tūrangawaewae
– a place to stand. For me Allen Curnow's immortal lines 'Not I, some
child, born in a marvellous year/Will learn the trick of standing
upright here' are the starting point. Has that child been born yet? I
hope so. I think so. Perhaps they come from Ōtorohanga, where a school trip back in 2014 led to a petition, and big things grew from there.
And what is that trick? Well, I would suggest a big part of it is
reconciling ourselves with the history of this country. Not the imagined
history of a plucky wee nation at the bottom of the globe, punching
above its weight, egalitarian and forward looking. I'm talking about the
messy, complicated history of how Pākehā colonised this land.
Then-Prime Minister John Key's 2014 insistence that New Zealand was settled peacefully
was widely ridiculed at the time. But the sentiments that underlay that
statement retain an enduring appeal for some. Those people haven't
learnt the trick.
A mature nation takes ownership of its history, not just cherry-picking
the good bits out to remember but also acknowledging the bad stuff as
well. Moving confidently into the future requires a robust understanding
of where we have come from and been.
Auckland Museum Hall of Memories New Zealand Wars Alcove |
Reconciling ourselves to the history of this land – finding a place to
stand – is not just about supporting the settlement of historical Treaty
of Waitangi claims. That's part of the story but not the whole
solution. It's about ordinary New Zealanders taking the time to
acknowledge and even own this history. Learn about it, respect it, pass
it on, make sure your children and their children learn these stories
too. Not so they can feel guilty or ashamed about the actions of their
ancestors. But so they can be big enough, and confident enough, to say,
'yes, this is part of our history too' (alongside the things we feel
good about today, like all those people who stood up against injustices
in the past when they saw them).
Read the rest of the article here.
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