The communist revolutions in Russia, China, and Cambodia had tens of thousands of educators - intellectuals - killed.
Stalin’s and Mao’s eliminations were countless. Between 1975 and 1979 it is estimated that Pol Pot’s Marxist regime in Cambodia almost eliminated all its educated citizens and amongst the 200,000 murdered only 87 of the country’s 1000 academics avoided state sanctioned death.
The mistrust that totalitarian regimes have for academics is easy to understand as coercive politics bring pain to most of their citizens while waiting for present suffering to bring about a promised utopia. Those most likely to examine and question unpalatable changes are a nation’s intelligentsia, therefore they must remain silent, or if they refuse, be got rid of.
If
it is the case that, according to the Boulogne Accord of 1988, “The
university……… produces, examines, appraises, and hands down culture by research
and teaching. To meet the need of the world around it, its research and
teaching must be morally and intellectually independent of all political
authority and economic power,” in short, a
place of reasoned discussion and free debate, then NZs universities have inverted
these noble aims by mimicking the government’s socially engineered agenda in suffocating
any dissenting opinion.
Who knew!
Massey University’s banning of Don Brash in 2018
raised eyebrows. A single protester persuaded the Vice Chancellor that Brash’s likely
discussion on Māori wards and seats on Councils might offend someone. When I
was at university, I found a lot that I didn’t understand, some that I did not
agree with and a little that I completely disliked, but I never felt entitled
to be protected from any of it. I’m guessing that the Posie Parker visit organisers
knew that they hadn’t a hope of getting any kind of university venue for her gig–
hell, she wasn’t even allowed to speak in the open air. But even if she and
Brash had been Flat Earthers or Holocaust Deniers I would have been interested
in listening to their arguments, scorn or revile them though I might. More relevantly, if I were a Vice Chancellor,
I would consider it vital that students - and staff - engage with controversy to
hone their critical faculties and debating skills. Researchers glumly point out
that there is currently no way of quantifying how many debates no longer occur
at universities because staff and students fear to be labelled as supporters of,
for example, hate speech, that they are racist or transphobic. I wonder when it
was that Councils began appointing Vice Chancellors to carry out the mixed
roles of social workers, kindy teachers and punitive parents.
University management censure staff who question race-based
policies around staffing, funding and courses and as the result of the recent
financial holes that the universities find themselves in many academics have
been told that Māori and Pasifika courses and staff will not be subject to cuts
that need to be made. The elevation of pass rates for students of minorities continues
to be reported at all NZ’s tertiary institutions. As an illustration, a senior
academic was told by his Head of School that if he again raised the subject of
academic standards, she would make it a disciplinary matter. This is, of
course, code for ‘you are now at the top of my redundancy list’. You have to
hope that this conversation did not take place in one of our medical schools!
To question the equivalence of matauranga Māori with
‘western’ science following exposure of the new draft science curriculum now is
to invite lazy slurs of racism and to put promotion and even jobs at risk. Why
is it that our universities are comfortable with the pejorative label of
‘western’ and ‘colonial’ to be attached to science, a knowledge system that began
to emerge before the first millennia in China, the Arab world and in the Inca
civilisation? Science, concerning itself with systematic experimentation and
the operation of fundamental laws has been contributed to from many civilisations,
not just the ‘west’. If matauranga Māori is the equivalent of global scientific
research, experimentation and pedagogy, why are they afraid of a debate. Or is
logic also an unpleasant colonial construct?
A recent commentator in the NZ Herald described
their child’s summary of a junior science class:
Pupil: Today we learned about the properties of
water.
Parents: How interesting. Tell us.
Pupil: Water has a spirit and a memory.
I suppose we must assume that this represents the
equivalence of traditional Māori ‘ways of knowing’ with science and that this
school has been out of the gates even before the new science curriculum has
moved beyond a draft. As an educator I have had many decades of awareness and
exposure to te reo, tikanga, kaupapa and support wholeheartedly their teaching
and cultural importance. Amidst all the
shouting it’s been forgotten that all societies have a history of observing and
explaining natural phenomena to assist, for example, agriculture and navigation,
and they too had gods and spirits to explain matters unknowable at that time. Just
the same, observing that spring’s increased sunlight will bring on crop growth
is not the equivalent of defining and explaining the chemistry of photosynthesis.
Is it not perverse to put the richness and spiritualty of Māori cultural belief
and experience up against the analytical rigour of global science? Can’t we honour
them as separate bodies of knowledge?
The refusal of university communities to allow rational discussion of these matters has gone a step further and resulted in a hysterical
response to those academics and other educators who would wish to continue open
inquiry as opposed to ‘dominant public opinions’, as the so-called Listener
Seven have discovered. I salute them and their international research
reputations from which their institutions gain such mana, and inevitably
remember Martin Niemoller’s 1946 confessional which condemns the silence of mid-century
German intellectuals.
‘First they came for the communists, and I did not
speak out—because I was
not a communist; Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak
out—because I was not a trade unionist; Then they came for the Jews, and I did
not speak out—because I was not a Jew; Then they came for me— and there was no
one left to speak out for me.’
How has it come about, I wonder,
that universities once the seeding ground for wide and intelligent discourse
and debate can now be arenas of coercion and repression? Do you ask yourself
whether the refusal to allow discussion of controversy suggests those in charge
themselves lack valid and persuasive arguments? Did you think that the re-education
purges in Stalin’s Russia, Pol Pot’s Cambodia, and Mao’s China could never
happen in Godzone?
Did you?
Penn Raine is an educator and writer who lives in NZ and France.
6 comments:
Would making a flax kiti AND a bone fish get me a double degree?
Presumably Pol Pot saved all the maori sudies academics.
Thank you, Penn.
Indeed, we must protect education, science, community relations and our hard-won democracy. To do so we must also ensure academic freedom and free speech. Further, it is crucial that we re-create an objective media, because currently it most certainly is not.
David Lillis
Actually, I’m no longer interested in honouring or treasuring Maori culture, language, world view, ways of knowing, or any other “Maori wonderfulness” that anyone thinks they can ram down the throats of every New Zealander. I’m all out of patience, totally fed up. I’ve simply had enough. I suspect it may take many years for me to regain any interest or tolerance whatsoever. Is that meant to be racist? No. It’s just honest. As for the present state of our education system, if I had children I’d want to home school them and send them offshore to university.
I feel the difference between science and technology needs clarifying, since many people confuse the two, when they are entirely different.
Science is strictly a process of exploring new knowledge whereas technology puts ideas into practice. Science makes predictions whereas technology simplifies the work and fulfills people's needs. Science gathers knowledge in an organized way through observation and experiment whereas technology is mostly practical in its purposes. Science remains unchangeable; only additions are made to further knowledge while in contrast technology changes. .Discovery ,like facts and laws of nature are scientific; while inventions and development of useful techniques are technology. Characteristic of science are deductions, analysis and theory development but technology deals with analysis and synthesis of design. Science gains useful knowledge about natural phenomenon, and their reasons, but in contrast technology can be useful or harmful.
The Western world through men like Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler and Newton produced the paradigm for modern science. Nothing scientifically comparable was originally, begun anywhere else in the rest of the world which in contrast did however, develop technologies. Mataurangi Maori qualifies as technology using the above guidelines.
1.The university disaster ( = dumb down) is no surprise - it is a part of CRT (Critical race theory) to push the racist/woke agenda.
So academia is doing what it was programmed to do = embed racism/wokism
This is clear.
2.The key issue is what happens next?
.how to cancel and reverse?
.how to rebuild academia as a key force in NZ's
This is much harder to do. Visionary leadership is needed. Who will do this?
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