The Virtues Of A Simpler Life: Two members of the 1970s Wilderland commune attempt to persuade their workhorse to regurgitate their clothes. Though it is hard to believe in 2013, in 1974 the Kirk-led Labour Government announced its support for state-subsidised communes ("Ohu") on Crown land.
JUST TRY TO IMAGINE THIS. A New Zealand government which
announces a scheme designed to, among other things: “assist people in becoming self-sufficient from the
land”; “give people a chance to develop alternative social models”; “promote
the virtues of a simpler life”; and “provide a place of healing for
participants as well as for society as a whole”.
Impossible? No –
it happened!
Forty years on,
the Kirk Labour Government’s “Ohu Scheme” (state-subsidised, self-sufficient communes on Crown land)
still possesses the power to shock and surprise. Taking their name from the
Maori word for “working together”, and their inspiration from the Israeli kibbutzim, Kirk’s communes represent
what is indisputably the high-point of utopian policy formation in New Zealand.
The inspirational
role played by the kibbutzim
(radically egalitarian and self-supporting communities established by Jewish
settlers in Palestine from the early twentieth century) reflected the very
close links that had grown up between the Israeli and New Zealand Labour
Parties since the birth of the State of Israel in 1948. By the 1960s, spending
a few weeks or months on a kibbutz
had become a rite of passage for many young Kiwi socialists. The kibbutzim’s role in entrenching the
ideals of solidarity and cooperation within Israeli society was openly admired by
Labour activists.
The 60s and 70s were
also the decades in which powerful intellectual challenges were mounted against
the individualism and materialism of what the American economist, J.K.
Galbraith, called the “Affluent Society”. All over the Western World, young
people were questioning the values of consumerism and loudly contesting the
moral legitimacy of any “Establishment” willing to overlook the horrors of the
Vietnam War.
The desire
to withdraw from this brutally acquisitive
society, and experiment with new forms of social organisation, was
strong. Culturally, this longing manifested
itself in the “hippy” movement, whose followers were invited to: “Turn on, tune
in and drop out.”
It was the
confluence of these two intellectual streams: the powerful political model of
the kibbutzim; and the so-called
“counter-cultural” impulses of the hippies; that gave the Ohu Scheme’s
promoters a fighting chance of success.
Even so, it is
unlikely that such a utopian project would have been given the go-ahead had New
Zealand not, in the early 1970s, been caught up and swept along on a great wave
of progressive activity.
In 1972, the
Royal Commission on Social Security recommended that: “The community [be]
responsible for giving
dependent people a standard of living consistent with human dignity and
approaching that enjoyed by the majority, irrespective of the cause of
dependency.” The Kirk Government responded by introducing the Domestic Purposes
Benefit.
In 1974 –
the same year that the Ohu Scheme was officially launched – New Zealand’s ground-breaking and world-beating Accident
Compensation Corporation was given legislative life.
Kirk’s
Attorney-General, the erudite and highly principled Dr Martyn Finlay, shocked
conservative New Zealanders by observing that no prison should be made so
secure that it destroyed all hope of escape in the minds of its inmates. An
“escape-proof” prison, he seemed to be suggesting, was an affront to the
indomitability of the human spirit.
Like the Ohu
Scheme itself, Dr Finlay’s comment simply does not compute in the grim context
of the twenty-first century’s second decade. Can anyone imagine John Key’s
Attorney General, the coldly acerbic Chris Finlayson, suggesting that Her
Majesty’s prisons be deliberately designed to protect the indomitability of the
human spirit? And what awful punishment would the Justice Minister, Judith
Collins, visit upon him if he did!
It would, of
course, be very wrong to suggest that the whole of New Zealand suddenly turned
into left-wing hippies in the 1970s. Because that simply isn’t true.
I vividly recall
the day Prime Minister Kirk announced the cancellation of the 1974 Springbok
Tour.
I was walking
down Fergusson Drive in Upper Hutt when an old fellow wearing an RSA badge
accosted me – presumably for the offence of being young and having long hair –
and berated me for several minutes on the undemocratic character of the PM’s
decision. Noticing the plethora of badges attached to my waistcoat (it was 1973!) he scrutinised them carefully for the emblems of New
Zealand’s traitorous anti-Apartheid movement. Finding none, he grumpily sent me
on my way. (He did not know how close I came that morning to pinning on my Halt
All Racist Tours badge!)
But, if the
progressivism and utopianism of the early 1970s was by no means universal, it
was, nevertheless, entirely real. New Zealand warships were dispatched to the waters around the French nuclear testing-site
at Mururoa. Racist rugby tours were
cancelled. Pristine southern lakes were
placed in the hands of environmental “guardians”. And, the government was prepared to set up rural communes.
We approach our utopias
only by daring to dream. In disavowing their existence, we forget how to do
even that.
This essay was originally published in The Press of Tuesday, July 23, 2013.
I'm living on the fringes of John Key's society.
ReplyDeleteI still believe it's possible.
To dream and turn Norm Kirk's dream into reality...
Despite over three decades of attacks on ideals, spearheaded by 1980s Reaganist America, with one of chief weapons being ridicule which continues to this day, the hippy movement is not dead. People with so called Hippy sensibilities need to let everyone else know the movement is alive and well. Especially younger people need to feel that there are others who feel exactly the same way they do about the world. The ant-Hippy movement is essentially reactionary, meaning it has no forward energy of its own. It is essentially parasitic by nature.
ReplyDelete1980.
ReplyDeleteI've yet to fully understand why, but something happened in that exact year which turned everything around. Not just Reagan and Thatcher.
It was the year computing technology broadened out from specialist niches to the broader world. It was the year when the boomer generation headed into their 30's.
But as you say Chris .. a whole lot of dreams died.
Stuff like this will get you a bad name.Rob Muldoon on Friedmanite believers "no real understanding on the impact of their belief on ordinary people.He also had harsher comments on finance houses property speculators and the I.M.F.
ReplyDeleteOf course there is always a better more social caring way.Thats up to the people to decide,not self serving political ego!s.
Those 1970 25-year-olds now own 3 houses and a bach on Waiheke (to which they travel using their Seniors Gold Cards) and are retiring on superannuation paid for by the wages of the generations that have had the ladder pulled up in their collective faces.
ReplyDeleteIs that right SHG?
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, they may have gone on to become a primary school teacher and a social worker.
They may have struggled against the neoliberal counter-revolution as so many baby-boomers did in the 1980s and 90s.
They may have fought for every cent of extra funding to keep the services going for the people they cared for. They may have resisted bulk-funding and worked tirelessly to preserve the values of our public education system.
They may have voted Alliance, or for the Greens - maybe for Helen Clark.
They may have taken out a second mortgage on their family home to help their kids through varsity. They may face another 15 years-plus in the workforce to pay it off.
By and large, SHG, it wasn't the sort of people who went to Wilderland who delivered us into the hands of the neoliberals.
Roger Douglas and Bill Birch weren't baby-boomers.
Not every German who turned 21 in 1933 was a Nazi. Not every Kiwi in their 30s when the 4th Labour Government unleashed hell was a Rogernome.
The vast majority of baby-boomers neither asked for nor wanted neoliberalism - some of us even fought it.
Those who pulled up the ladder on young New Zealanders belong in a different category: it's called the ruling class.
Of course the biggest problem of the 'back to the land' thing was that its was and is bloody hard work. Having tried some of that-milking our own cow, making butter etc is that takes a lot of effort and learning skills that are in most cases long gone and very hard to learn just from Mother Earth. It wasn't much good if you just wanted to lay about and smoke dope.
ReplyDeleteGood response Chris.
ReplyDelete@Jigsaw, the communes of the 70's were often populated with people who were prepared to work and make it work for them. Many were "Long-haired Hippies" but they didn't just lay around smoking dope.
All they were doing was to replace some-one elses work with their own.
I'm 69yrs old and I worked hard on low wages paying high taxes to support those who had come before me on the understanding that when I got too old to work the generation following me would support me. And you do.
Remember all that free education you got as a child? I paid for that. Free dental care? I paid for that. Free or cheap doctors fees? I paid for that too. I never complained about doing so and I am not complaining now.
Too many selfish people around today sadly.