I’m writing this column in a camping ground at Long Bay, on
the Coromandel Peninsula.
It’s Sunday morning. From where our caravan is parked I
could almost spit into the sea, if I were of a mind to.
There are bush-covered headlands to the north and south of
the bay and pohutukawa trees line the shore. Last night I heard the
quintessential New Zealand nocturnal sound of a ruru (morepork) calling.
At the moment the tide is out and I can see kids fossicking
on the rocks. The floating platform that people were diving from when we
arrived here yesterday is virtually high and dry.
Earlier this morning I watched a family harvesting cockles.
The sea is flat calm, the air is warm and there’s a gentle breeze blowing.
Beyond the bay I can see a string of pretty islands:
Motukopake, Motuoruhi and other, smaller ones whose names I don’t know. Somewhere
in the distance, hidden in the haze on the other side of the Hauraki Gulf, is
Auckland.
Unlike some of the camping grounds my wife and I have stayed
in over the past few days, this one is unmistakeably Kiwi. It’s not flash but it’s friendly and it has all the essentials.
Most of our fellow campers are tradies who have done well
and bought caravans and boats. Dogs are permitted in the camping ground and
behave themselves impeccably, with the exception of the camping ground owner’s
one-eyed border collie, which runs in front of the camp’s maintenance ute
barking furiously and trying to bite the tyres.
The maintenance man tells me the dog does this only with the
camp’s own vehicles, never the guests’, so I suppose it’s okay.
Anyway, all this is by way of a long-winded pre-amble. Get
to the point, I hear you say.
Well, I was in the camp kitchen this morning washing the
breakfast dishes, and through an opening in the wall I could see the TV set in
the adjoining lounge. The TV was on and although I couldn’t hear what was being
said, I could see that the scenes were from Christchurch.
Because we’d been on the road for several days, it was the
first TV coverage I had seen of the massacre and its aftermath. I assumed it
was one of the local channels recapping last week’s events, but then I saw the
Al Jazeera logo at the bottom of the screen.
I saw armed police in the streets of Christchurch. I saw
Jacinda Ardern speaking with her familiar signer for the deaf at her side. I
saw floral tributes to the dead piled high under a banner that said, among
other things, “Kia Kaha” – stay strong.
Overseas viewers must have wondered what it meant. We know,
of course, and on seeing those words on the screen I felt a sudden surge of
emotion. It was a forceful reminder that this terrible thing had happened right
here.
I was reminded of something my wife said on the night of the
shootings as we sat in our caravan listening to radio news coverage. “This is
something that happens somewhere else,” she said.
Well, New Zealand has become that somewhere else. It’s no
longer possible to delude ourselves that we are somehow magically insulated against
the evil we see reported nightly on the TV news from other places.
For 48 hours, we were the centre of world attention, and not
in a good way. On the night following the massacre I streamed Newshour from the BBC World Service. It
was almost entirely taken up by Christchurch.
Now call me perverse if you like, but I felt proud listening
to the BBC’s coverage. Proud at the actions of my fellow New Zealanders who saw
what was happening on Deans Avenue and stopped to help the victims, regardless
of threats to their own safety. Proud at the many New Zealanders interviewed by
the BBC who insisted they wouldn’t allow this catastrophe to change the way we are.
And proud, too, that so many commentators overseas shared our own astonishment
that this could happen in New Zealand, of all places – a country universally
acknowledged as tolerant, open and respectful of human rights.
It’s not the terrible event that defines us, but how we
respond.
And as I look out over Long Bay, where the tide is starting
to come in and the boaties are backing their trailers down the launching
ramp and the demented one-eyed border collie has just tried to round up a flock of
seagulls, I’m reminded again of what we value about living in New Zealand and
why so many people from troubled countries want to come here. It takes a lot
more than a single terrible event to change that.
Karl du Fresne, a freelance journalist, is the
former editor of the Dominion-Post. He blogs at karldufresne.blogspot.co.nz. First published in the Manawatu Standard, the Nelson Mail and Stuff.
3 comments:
It takes a war to change NZ as we have seen in the country's history. That was huge change. What the person in custody wants if for us to panic and to grow the same kind of hatred in our hearts that he has. It is not going to happen. There is still a vestige of Christian grace in NZ. Thank God for it.
I have to say - I was totally amazed that this atrocity was committed by a deranged western individual. I had anticipated the first such event would be perpetrated by one (or more)of the main-stream extremists.
I envy you Karl, those moments in a life when total realisation comes of what is almost perfection.
We all have these wonderful times, mine came early on a trip to climb a range of Mountains on the Isle of Skye, at the tender age of 16 with four others. Having climbed the highest peak in the Black Cuillins rocky Sgurr Alasdair designated now, a grade 2 scramble! ( For safety we took along our parents old rope clothes lines thankfully not needed).
There we sat on that fine afternoon (unbelievable that it not having rained, or even looking like rain)!; under an clear azure blue sky. Our views encompassed the Inner Hebrides, and further to the West the Outer Hebrides Isles, clear as crystal set like jewels in an enchanted sea.
Idyllic days are few and far between, if they come at all; the Arthurian Poets rightly named them as a dream worth having. It is not however in this hard world of ever changing realities, that we can enjoy such diversions that nature rewards us with.
I guess that was the real message in Lord Bryon’s Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage; we are, as I once heard described, as victims to the Fallacies of Hope. So long as that remains so will we.
We live in a land of ever contrasting beauty, no wonder people choose this as their final Elysian Fields!
Enjoy your holiday Karl, in a now vanishing New Zealand, and I trust your return to reality has a soft landing.
Brian
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