The call for a
national day to mark the New Zealand wars has been backed by claims that the
wars of rebellion against the national government were land wars, which “left
much of the country's indigenous population battered and bloodied, and facing
the prospect of dying out altogether within a few generations.”
This is quite
false. The reason for the Maori
population decrease of the nineteenth century is clear from the data – there
were too few young, too few women, following the disruption and killing of the
intertribal wars that preceded the Treaty.
Nor were the rebellions a consequence of land loss – after all,
confiscations followed the fighting and could not have been the cause. They had deeper roots, again in the years of
intertribal warfare, as well as the difficult cultural changes of the
time. The truth is complex, more
fascinating than the simplistic myth of colonial wrong that has been put out
during forty years of a grievance industry (since the establishment of the
Waitangi Tribunal) fuelled by payments for complaint, turning attention away
from the many benefits of a settled government that freed slaves and provided
peace and prosperity to most Maori.
The search for
causes of rebellion takes us back in time to those intertribal wars, and then
in particular to developments in Taranaki, which set the scene for a major
phase of fighting that began at Waitara in 1861. The following notes provide a glimpse of the
main events. There is more detail in my
books, When two cultures meet, the New Zealand experience and Two great New Zealanders, Tamati
Waka Nene and Apirana Ngata.
From 1840, the
new government, with its limited resources, followed a considered policy of
limited intervention in Maori affairs while cultural adjustment was under
way. Some of the advances were
unsettling. When slaves became free and
started to act as free men, many chiefs complained of their loss of mana. Meanwhile differences among Maori, including
feuding and lawlessness, continued.
In the north
the introduction of customs duties, the shift of the capital to Auckland, and
controls over the timber industry, brought a downturn in the Maori
economy. Ngapuhi chief Tamati Waka Nene took their complaints to the Governor, who listened
and made a number of changes. When Hone
Heke desired to maintain his position as a warrior chief and chose instead to
take up arms, Tamati Waka Nene fought against him, and the principle Waikato
chief Te Wherowhero (previously a savage warrior and later the first Maori
king, Potatau) offered aid against the rebels.
After that fighting was over, Tamati Waka Nene and Governor Grey agreed
that there would be no confiscation of land, as that would create future
grievance.
In
the south of the island Te Rauparaha also desired to continue the old ways, to
fight and to drive out settlers. After
he was taken prisoner, Te Wherowhero and Tamati Waka Nene, who had become
valued advisors to the Governor, offered to act as guarantors and Te Rauparaha
was freed without any further threat to settlers.
The threats and
fighting of those few rebellious chiefs added significantly to the problems of
the early years when an under-resourced government was starting to build a new
nation. That disruption impeded progress
by taking the attention and resources of government.
After
a period of quiet, a new phase of dispute and rebellion by some in Taranaki and
Waikato began, starting with a feud at Waitara and leading to threats of
separation and armed attacks by some in the king movement.
That
conflict had its roots in the previous intertribal wars and the coming of
peace, which had left ownership of land uncertain, thus creating the conditions
for discord. The full story is complex;
the following notes point to some key developments.
·
Between 1800 and 1840
intertribal warfare and conquest across the country created refugees (who fled
lost homelands) and slaves (taken away by their conquerors), with often only a
few fearful remainders remaining. This
was particularly significant around Waitara in 1820 and 1831 following a series
of savage raids by Waikato led by Te Wherowhero.
·
Te Rauparaha then led Ngati Toa
away from those attacks to the south where they attacked other tribes. They were joined by Atiawa of Taranaki.
·
The few survivors in Taranaki
were grateful to gain security by selling land to the
New Zealand Company in 1839.
·
Freed slaves returned from
Waikato in 1841 and some people came back from the south. Disputes over land began among these various
groups – many who returned were unhappy that those remaining had sold
land. Waikato also claimed ownership by
right of conquest.
·
In 1844, Commission Spain
supported the sale to the
New Zealand Company.
·
Faced with threats of war,
Governor Fitzroy reversed Spain’s decision and settlers were forced to abandon
their new farms, to become refugees, deprived of land or savings. The land then handed to Maori became the
object of many arguments among the various potential Maori owners.
·
In 1848, a great migration of
587 returned from Waikanae to Waitara, adding to the different tribal groups
who vied for position.
·
Some Maori were concerned with
the lawlessness and feuding in their communities, disappointed that the new
government had not brought a firm rule of law to them. They felt that the government had delayed too long in answering the
appeal for control, which would end their internal strife. It is important to note that the complaint
here was not against colonisation, but the very opposite, that the colonial
government was not firmly governing Maori.
Some then felt that their future depended on their own efforts, and decided that the creation of a Maori king could provide the needed
regional control. But many tribes who
were approached with the idea were not interested.
·
The considerable differences
among Waikato tribes was displayed graphically during a 1857 meeting at Rangiriri, which had been intended to set up
a Maori king.
First a long procession
came in bearing the flag of the new king and took their position in the
center. Soon a union jack was seen
displayed on a small nearby hill, followed by a second. Two processions bearing these union jacks
then approached and occupied an opposite position to that occupied by the king
party. This was followed by other
Maories who had not joined either party, and who occupied the third side of the
square. The discussion was for the most
part the expression of opposing points of view, and the meeting ended with
complete disagreement, each group holding to their own flag.
·
At a
further meeting in 1858 there were again differences of opinion, with some
wanting a senior chief for the region, clearly under the sovereignty of Queen
Victoria, and some wanting a king, with separate and uncertain sovereignty. Te Wherowhero was cajoled into becoming the
first king, as Potatau I, and his acceptance was announced by Wiremu Tamihana without resolution of the disagreement. Te
Wherowhero was a pacifist and friend of the Governor, but was in the last years
of his life, becoming senile and turning blind.
He was powerless and played no part in the councils of the
kingites. He died in 1860. The second king, his son,
Tukaroto Matutaera who became Kiingi Taawhiao, was also a pacifist but was weak and often dissolute.
·
There were
many feuds among Taranaki Maori. At Waitara Teira headed a group who wanted to sell 60 acres of their
land while Kingi, who was on the opposing side of an ongoing feud (this tangled
discord of wrongs and revenge had started some time previously), claimed a
right of veto (both had returned from Waikanae in 1848). Although it was recognised that Teira owned
his land, an investigation found Maori opinion divided as to who was in the
right. When Governor Brown finally made
a judgement call and decided that the sale should proceed, Kingi raised arms
and built a fort on the land.
·
There were serious divisions
among the kingites. Wiremu Tamihana, a
peacemaker who often seemed confused as to what the king stood for, wanted to
leave any dispute to the Taranaki tribes.
Others such as Rewi Maniapoto constantly called for aggressive action
and challenged the sovereignty of the Queen.
Although Te Wherowhero ordered Ngati Maniapoto not to join Kingi at
Waitara, an armed war party went to play a key role in the fighting. Members of that faction of the kingites were
rebels who today would be called terrorists.
·
That same year, 1860, a great
meeting in Kohimarama of chiefs from across the entire country expressed
loyalty to the British Crown and condemnation of Kingi and the disruption of
the kingites. They wanted better
government and were ready to work with government in the formation of regional
runanga. There were splits in the king
movement, most importantly between the loyalist lower Waikato and the warlike
Ngati Maniapoto and Taupo – who lived further from regular contact with
settlers – and there was little support for the movement outside the greater
Waikato region.
·
It was never clear to
government just what the king movement wanted.
Soon after taking up office in 1861, Governor Grey went to Waikato for a
meeting. The responses were
unclear. Grey pointed out that
sovereignty must be assured, that a king and a queen could not coexist, but
that he would not take action on that basis alone; he would judge them on their
actions. They had joined fighting in
Taranaki. There were further attacks on
settlers and threats on Auckland, and since any government has a duty to
provide security for all citizens, action was taken. When government forces were resisted in their
movements into what was considered by rebels as separate national territory,
fighting began. Throughout those wars
there were ongoing differences between Wiremu Tamihana, who wanted to make
peace (even if on uncertain terms), and Rewi Maniapoto, who wanted to drive out
the British.
·
That fighting was not
principally about land. There were no
forced sales and the land of those who became rebels was largely held by
Maori. In 1861 nationwide 76% of land
was Maori. The retention was less in
areas where Maori were welcoming to settlers – for example 55% among
Ngatikahungunu. Amongst those who took
up arms, far less land had been sold.
The 60 acres offered by Teira and his group was 0.13% of the Ngatiawa
lands. Taranaki and Ngatiruanui held 88%
of their land, Ngatimaniapoto 95%, and Waikato, Waipa, Taupo and Upper Wanganui
held all their land.
·
After the previous fighting
against Hone Heke, Tamati Waka Nene and Governor Grey had agreed that there
would be no confiscation of land, as that would create future grievance. The opposite
decision was made after the defeat of the kingite rebels and there was
confiscation, both as punishment and to provide a buffer between Auckland and
the warlike rebellious tribes of Ngatimaniapoto and Taupo. In such a confused situation, with divisions
both between and within tribes (many fighting with the government or to protect
their own land) it was not possible to define clearly who had been
responsible. Maniapoto had been the most
hostile, yet their land was not confiscated.
Although close to half the confiscated land was returned or repurchased,
grievances have continued, as had been feared.
After the fighting was over, there was much unhappiness over the deaths
and confiscation, but these were the consequences of armed rebellion, not the
cause.
The fighting of
some Maori against the government and many other Maori that has become known as
the land wars was not the simple consequence of loss of land. The genesis was in the previous intertribal
fighting and the ongoing feuds among Maori over ownership of land, which was
never clear, and often multiple, in Maori lore.
The first complaint was not of excessive colonisation; it was that the
government had failed to bring law and order to the more isolated communities
where feuding, fighting and insecurity continued. The policy of a slow assertion of the new
system, allowing Maori to become familiar with British law and to join in
efforts of local government, was wise and worked well in many ways, but was
found lacking there. It is incorrect to
blame problems on a colonisation that was in fact cautious while ignoring the
difficulties of a Maori cultural revolution and the manifest improvements in
Maori life.
Footnote
A couple of
weeks ago when I told a friend of some of the story of the king movement, the
reasons for its beginning, the powerlessness of kings and the infighting within
that that movement, he was fascinated.
He knew none of that. Once more I
could see how the Waitangi Tribunal and the grievance industry have dumbed down
and distorted our history. After all,
the facts summarised here are readily available in standard texts – written
before the revisionism of the last 40 years.
Go back to early accounts and you will be fascinated with what you will
find.
Dr.
John Robinson is a research scientist in mathematics and physics.
He has investigated a variety of topics, including global issues and the
social statistics of Maori. His
recognition of fundamental flaws in the interpretation of nineteenth century
Maori demographics led him to consider the history of those times in several books: The Corruption of New
Zealand Democracy, When Two Cultures Meet; the New Zealand
Experience and Two Great New Zealanders;
the Wisdom of Tamati Waka
Nene and Apirana Ngata – where he explored the considerable shift that
Maori culture went through with the coming of European civilisation and
the benefits to Maori.
6 comments:
Interesting reading and yes things for many Maori were not good. I do notice however how you do not mention anything about how the Crown was acting in other parts of the globe at the time of colonisation of Aotearoa and the impacts on other indigenous peoples. First nation Americans, Aboriginal Australians, India , Pakistan etc etc. HMmmmm lol the crown was reeking havoc wherever it went lol but nice try
Anonymous. What is your point? Surely we should be proud of the fact that our English ancestors seemed to be trying to do the right thing for a change. I for one am getting sick of the collective guilt that is being thrust upon my culture by a group oof greedy opportunist European New Zealanders with some Maori ancestors unwilling to even acknowledge the many advantages provided by the settlers.
Dr Robertson, I am almost through the book you contributed to, "One Treaty, One Nation". I noted you quoted someone called Andy Oakley, as saying Alan Titford was jailed for 24 years on a dodgy rape charge. I hope you do not subscribe to that view. There are people wrongly convicted of serious crimes but I would like to see some evidence that Titford was one of them.
While I agree with most of the what is said in the book I think it could have been less polarizing. Everyone knows there are no full blooded Maori in NZ. This is worth pointing out in regards voting and other legal issues but the continued use of part Maori instead of Maori is unnecessarily offensive. If someone is 1/16 Maori and commits a crime they are refereed to at best as Maori and often as stone agers by anonymous racist over Kiwiblog if they have any Maori features.
I bought the book because I believe there should be a binding referendum to get rid of the Maori seats in general and regional elections. However, the best way to do it is to be less confrontational.
As an original Kiwi (Immigrant as all once were) my ancestors had nothing to do with earlier immigrants (Maori and others) The one big disappointment I have after 45 years of being a Kiwi is the apartheid forced on everybody by governmental pressure. Why should anyone be expected to fund historic grievances which they have no involvement in? I see the Maori culture as promoting violence and dangerous to health. The Haka doesn't represent a welcome or being nice and we are repeatedly advised to wash our hands to prevent the spread of pathogens whilst rubbing noses is apparently fine! Perhaps I should be returning to my original homeland wearing nothing but daub to protest the forfeiture of ancestral lands in ancient times.
Kilravok, the article is about special Maori seats and settlements that mainly benefit the brown elite and seldom filter through to the average Maori. Comments like yours will give the impression that those who want an end to the Maori seats and settlements just do not like Maori.
John Robinson’s summary gives an accurate glimpse of NZ history as it happened. I am reading his book while also reading Vincent O’Malley’s “The Great War for NZ – Waikato 1800-2000”. The books deal with the same subject matter but are poles apart, with O’Malley’s lavish book coming over as the author’s opinions dressed up as fact. Robinson presents events as they happened in the context of the time they happened in, often in the words of a person who lived at that time. Successive politicians, the Waitangi Tribunal, and the Office of Treaty Settlements, all have a lot to answer for because they have ignored the detailed record of events held on file by government departments. Instead, they have accepted hearsay oral “histories” from people out to make a dollar. Government credibility has taken a massive hit. Race relations have worsened. The damage has been done, and who knows how long it is going to take to repair it.
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