In recent times, it has become common practice to commence a communication to someone with Kia ora and conclude with Nga mihi or some other expression in the Maori language. This now appears to be standard practice in communications from Government Departments, state-funded institutions like schools, community organisations and even some public companies such as Contact Energy.
The body of the communication remains in English for the good reason that the writer intended it to be understood. Why, then, a salutation and conclusion in Maori?
At the end of 2019, the CEO of Forest and Bird even went as far as to wish supporters Merry Christmas and Happy New Year in Maori despite the fact that Christmas is a European Christian festival and Matariki is in the middle of the year. Has the language that served Shakespeare, Shelley, Keats, Wordsworth, Tennyson et al. so well suddenly become inadequate for beginning and ending a letter?
The obvious implication is that Maori culture and Maori
language are imbued with a spirituality and mysticism that is absent from
Anglo-European culture and hence cannot possibly be expressed in English. This is a premise of te ao maori - the
Maori “world view” - and, whether knowingly or not, those who choose to change
language for the opening and closing of a communication, are subscribing to
that “world view”. Otherwise, why not
stick to English?
Once that notion is
accepted, it is but another short step to accepting the notion that those who
possess te ao maori (i.e. iwi
nominees) should have access to
decision-making at local, regional and national level without needing to go
through the democratic process of election upon which our free society is
constructed. Indeed, Peter/Pita Sharples,
when co-leader of the Maori Party, expressed the view that the Westminster
system of government (i.e. full democracy) was not suited to New Zealand’s
circumstances. Hence the growing
practice of granting unelected iwi nominees access to local and regional
government and the developing perspective that, at national level, the country should
be governed via a “partnership” between the Crown and Maori.
Locally, the impact of te ao maori can be seen in the acceptance by the
Queenstown Lakes District Council of the perception that the entire region is
Ngai Tahu “ancestral land” and in the current proposal that significant parts
of the region have wahi tupuna status requiring a cultural impact
report (at a cost) from the iwi in association with any resource consent.
Thus far, many people appear unaware of and/or unconcerned
at the spread of such race-based power and influence. It does, however, concern me. As an individual, I am, of course,
powerless to resist an agenda that has been embraced by government at all
levels and by large sections of the media.
I am not, nevertheless, willing to contribute to it by donating
money to organisations who choose to
indulge in social conditioning via the
gratuitous use of phrases in te reo maori. The
agenda that is underpinned by this practice is one that I will not endorse.
John Bell is a former secondary teacher with grass-roots political experience including in the National Party and PPTA.
1 comment:
Yes, we lose our democracy by becoming the silent majority.
Meanwhile a small minority, often with an unjustified financial / political agenda for power continue on without being confronted.
It's up to all hard working, honest average Kiwis to speak up now and continue to build NZ into a forward looking society together, not a separated society.
Unfortunately our media, political leaders and our educational system are largely unable or uninformed enough to realise the future result of their weakness in leading this country.
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