Sending A Message: Justice Minister, Judith Collins, has responded to criticism of her appointment of Dame Susan Devoy as Race Relations Commissioner with the highly revealling comment: “The far left does not have a monopoly on caring about race relations.” History suggests, however, that if the Left doesn't have a monopoly on, then the Right isn't even in the market for, improved race relations.
DAME SUSAN DEVOY’s appointment as Race relations
Commissioner sends a very clear message. But about what? And to whom?
An answer may be found in Justice Minister Judith Collins’ observation
that: “The far left does not have a monopoly on caring about race relations”.
Ms Collins packs a great deal of political information into
this typically belligerent statement.
It speaks powerfully and directly to the Right’s
long-standing resentment at finding itself, again and again, on the morally
indefensible side of history.
From the mid-1970s, the National Party positioned itself,
politically, as the defender of the Pakeha majority against any and all charges
of racism that the Maori minority, and others, were increasingly levelling
against them.
According to National, race relations in New Zealand were
extremely healthy, and it was an affront to this country’s internationally
celebrated reputation for fairness and tolerance to suggest otherwise.
This position became increasingly untenable as, over the
course of the 70s, 80s and 90s, a new generation of historians systematically
demolished New Zealand’s great foundational myths: the version of history which
the inheritors of colonialism had so assiduously constructed since the wars and
confiscations of the Nineteenth Century.
The most important to be taken apart was the Myth of the
Moriori.
For decades, New Zealand schoolchildren were taught that
their country’s first inhabitants, the Moriori, had been wiped out by the Maori
– the warlike, culturally superior race of settlers who supplanted them.
For the Europeans who had replaced Maori as the dominant
racial group in New Zealand, the Moriori Myth was morally indispensable. By
establishing an historical narrative based on successive waves of settlers,
each one stronger and better fitted for survival than the last, the European
conquest and despoliation of the Maori could be painted as part of a “natural”
progression.
“We” (the Pakeha) were no worse than “they” (the Maori) when
it came to asserting the right of the stronger to overpower the weaker. We
were, however, “better” than they were – because rather than wipe out the
people who’d stood in our way, we “advanced” Europeans were willing to share
with the vanquished all the “benefits” of Western Civilisation.
That the Maori had not fared as appallingly as Australian
Aborigines or the Native Americans spoke eloquently of New Zealand’s
“progressive” record of race relations.
The true and tragic story of the Moriori people (of the
Chatham Islands) offered as little to Pakeha as it did to Maori. (Which
probably explains why both races were content to connive in its extraordinary
distortion.)
The myth was , however, of such critical importance to
Pakeha self-perception that, even today, you still find many New Zealanders
clinging tenaciously to its reassuring message of moral equivalence.
Conservative New Zealanders remained highly resistant to the
unpalatable truths emerging from their nation’s colonial past. Rather than let
the new historical research bring about a re-evaluation of their previous
assumptions concerning race, they and their National Party representatives
became even more determined to uphold all the old shibboleths.
National’s defence of the Springbok Rugby Tour of 1981 not
only made it a target for the entire New Zealand Left (from Labour to the
Workers’ Communist League) but, as events steadily vindicated the arguments of
the protesters, it also helped to foster a deep-seated sense of right-wing
grievance.
Nelson Mandela Free: The National Party has found it very difficult to accept that on the question of Apartheid - as on so many other racial questions - the Left has been vindicated, and the Right condemned, by History.
The Left had accused the Right of being on the wrong side of
history, and History had been unkind enough to concur. Politically, National
had no option but to accept the enhanced role of the Treaty of Waitangi (and
its tribunal) and celebrate the victory of Nelson Mandela’s African National
Congress (once described as “terrorists” by Sir Robert Muldoon) but it rankled.
Oh yes, it rankled.
And as those historical victories were transmuted into a
framework of human rights recognition and protection (building on the more
liberal Sir Keith Holyoake-led National Party’s Office of the Race Relations
Conciliator, and the Labour Prime Minister, Sir Geoffrey Palmer’s, Bill of
Rights Act) the Right’s sense of grievance – of being put-upon by what it
labelled “political correctness” – grew and festered in the body politic.
Just how large this cancer had grown was revealed in 2004
when National Party Leader, Dr Don Brash’s, “Nationhood” speech, at Orewa, saw
his party’s position in the Colmar-Brunton opinion poll advance by a record 17
percentage points.
National’s narrow defeat in 2005, and Dr Brash’s successor,
John Key’s, tactical alliance with the Maori Party, both muted and diverted the
Right’s angry rejection of the Left’s “political correctness”. Anti-Maori
prejudice was channelled into hard-line welfare and law-and-order “reforms” –
measures guaranteed to hit Maori New Zealanders the hardest.
Dame Susan’s appointment is emblematic of National’s
continuing denial of its historical moral delinquency. With her controversial
announcement, Ms Collins simultaneously delivers reassurance to an aggrieved
Right, and an obscene, two-fingered gesture to “the far left”.
This essay was
originally published in The Press of Tuesday,
26 March 2013.
What qualifications do you need to be a race relations conciliator – just askin'.
ReplyDeleteComparatively speaking, race relations in NZ have been pretty good. Sure there's conflict at he political and legal level and it often gets heated, but at the personal level most people don't care.
ReplyDeleteIf you go to other countries, you simply won't see indigenous people, much less work with them, live with them and fraternize with them. I've had people overseas actually ask me if I know any Maoris. It's ridiculous. They think that they live on reservations.
I know Australians who've never met an Aboriginal person, for example. We're far from perfect, but better than most places.
I say give her a chance. I hope her previous comments were just ill thought out, off the cuff remarks and she will surprise us with some deeper understanding of the racial issues in NZ.
ReplyDeleteThe race relations commissioner works for ALL New Zealanders not just as adjudicator for Maori only.
ReplyDeleteWith the changed societal demographics and increase in the number of different and well established cultures in New Zealand, the commissioner must be able to have a brief over (as but one example) Jewish/Arab relations.
Off course the left moan about the selection of the commissioner, but I have yet to hear from the left putting forward any alternative contenders.
Did the left not know that the commissioner position was coming up for renewal and did they lobby the government with a list of suitable candidates?
Cant think of any news article referring to the lefts preferred candidate.
No use complaining after the event, should have been lobbied for earlier.
Thank you. a succinctly successful encapsulation of the festering racialism and pakeha angst in our country.
ReplyDeleteTalking about moaning, the good old rule of thumb in right wing New Zealand race relations is – everything is okay as long as white people are happy. You'll notice that all those right-wing letters to the editor talking about race relations being set back 100 years never ever refer to Maori being dissatisfied.
ReplyDeleteI think you'll find that Helen Clark provided the biggest two finger salute to Maori and Maori/Pakeha relations by legislating to place outright ownership of the foreshore and seabed into Crown Ownership.This was the act that sparked the formation of the highly successful Maori Party. Right from the heartland of the far left. The solution of "Public Domain", had been devised and was given Cullen's blessing. This was then kicked to the kerb by Peters who spruiked the alternate solution that was so distasteful to Maori
ReplyDeleteWhat race do you need to be a race relations conciliator – just askin'.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous@4.42, 26/3
ReplyDeleteI assure you that, when I lived in the UK, many of my friends and colleagues were indigenous. One of them actually spoke Welsh as her first language.
I think you're eliding race relations (and the concept of human equality) with the issue of indigenousness.
True, New Zealand has behaved better to its indigenous population than have Australia or the nations of the Americas. But that's a pretty low baseline.
We are now,however, a nation of many cultures and peoples.
It could be that the concept of Treaty Partnership between Maori and Pakeha is relevant to all the multifarious issues affecting relations between these different ethnicities. And it could be that it's largely if not totally irrelevant.
Either way, the task of conciliation can require a very broad range of skills and sensitivities, as well as a knowledge of the long and complex histories of the various groups involved (e.g. why do Serbs and Croats tend not to get along).
I think it's not unreasonable to doubt whether Dame Susan has this knowledge base.
Hmmm. I'm not sure you're being fair there Chris. I've only been here 20 years but I've seen Labour and National do good and bad.
ReplyDeleteI arrived as Doug Graham was getting torn into his work and I'm pretty sure National's record of completing settlements is off the charts compared to Labour's (close to nil claims started and finished in nine years of Clark's government?); and as another poster has pointed out it was Labour that pulled the outrageous F&S stunt with ACT being an opponent and National repealing.
On the other hand National disgraced itself in the brief Brash years (or was it months?) and the occasional thing like this.
" And it could be that it's largely if not totally irrelevant."
ReplyDeleteIf Maori ever decide it's irrelevant then it maybe. Otherwise it's the rule of thumb all over again.
I think the far left should always be in charge of making these type of appointments otherwise they will be very unhappy and discontented. We can't have that!
ReplyDeleteWhat is it about the change from "Conciliator" to "Commissioner"?
ReplyDeleteHmmmm.....
Anonymous 3.58pm
ReplyDeleteCommon Sense - the best qualification of all
Since we don't want to mess with flow guessing on words, how about multiple finger gestures to delete words, like two fingers left to delete a word, or two or three fingers down to minimize the keyboard. Both are features I dearly missed in flow. To ensure it's not accidental, real time responsiveness, like slowly highlighting the current word from right to left in red during the deletion gesture, or the keyboard following the user's fingers during the minimization gesture, would be a plus. (And just look way cool.)
ReplyDelete