“Faces of Innocents: High rates of child abuse among Māori can be traced back to colonisation, academic says.” Waikato Associate Professor Leonie Pihama, director of Te Kotahi Research Institute at Waikato University and director of Māori and Indigenous Analysis makes this claim. But is it true?
The resurgence of interest in Māori culture driven by Pihama and other academics and Māori activists is not always accurate when they treat Māori history as pick and mix.
It’s true Māori are disproportionately represented in child abuse statistics today, since data were first collected in 1967 and, arguably, prior.
It’s true Māori are disproportionately represented in child abuse statistics today, since data were first collected in 1967 and, arguably, prior.
Before colonialism Māori were hunters, gatherers and food growers struggling to survive if food was scarce or neighbouring tribes pillaged and stole, when they were hungry, or sometimes just for the heck of it. Villages were fortified to protect the inhabitants, life was hard and death, violence and slavery everyday occurrences.Mōkai (servants or slaves) were usually spoils of war, condemned to lives of drudgery, danger, heavy physical work and obedience to their masters or mistresses' whims; they were expected to fight under supervision, could be used to negotiate with enemies, or as food if supplies were short.
The life of the unborn child had little value and they, along with the baby girls that made it into the world, were dispatched to the afterlife without regret if food was scarce.
There is much evidence to support the conclusion that both infanticide and induced abortion were widely practiced in pre- and post-New Zealand by the Māoris. Reasons for the practice of both abortion and infanticide were more often social than medical. The desire to stay young, fertility control, and the fear of social disgrace are cited as some reasons why abortion was practiced. Methods of inducing abortion included drugs, religious methods, and constrictive belts. Infanticide was practiced as revenge by a mother on a wandering husband or as a means of matching the population to the food supply. Because female babies were less highly valued than males, it was females who were almost always killed. The religous mythology surrounding both these practices is reviewed.
NIH National Library of Medicine, “Māori abortion practices in pre and early European New Zealand”, 28 December 1977
Early settler and writer Joel Samuel Polack recalled his conversation with Māori women between 1831 and 1837.
On taxing some females with having committed infanticide, they laughed heartily at the serious manner in which I put the question. They told me the poor infants did not know or care much about it. One young woman, who had recently destroyed a female infant, said that she wished her mother had done the same to her, when she was young; ‘For why should my infant live?’ she added; ‘to dig the ground! to be a slave to the wives of her husband! to be beaten by them, and trodden under foot! No! can a woman here protect herself, as among the white people?’
Hobson’s Pledge, “Colonisation-Violence Link Debunked”, 16 November 2018
Government accounts of colonisation gloss over the two decades of missionary work before the arrival of European settlers and don’t mention the Christian revival of 1835 and 1845 at all.
Human life had little value in pre-European Māori culture; that value was introduced by Christian missionaries such as Henry Williams, head of the Anglican CMS mission, who earned Māori trust and became an effective peacemaker during the tribal musket wars from when he arrived in NZ in 1823 until the wars ended in 1840.
The first missionary to arrive in NZ was Samuel Marsden who held the first Christian service on NZ soil in the Bay of Islands on Christmas Day 1814 when he and other missionaries saw very little response from Māori to their preaching the gospel.
Authors Evans and McKenzie researched and wrote about NZ Christian revivals, and they claim the great Māori awakening was the greatest Christian revival of all when they published their research in 1999.
The greatest evangelical movement to occur, so far, in New Zealand, was in fact the first one to happen at all. This movement occurred approximately between the years 1835 and 1845, centring around the year 1839.
Strangely, this great movement has been largely neglected amongst church historians in the land of “the long white cloud”. It was to be followed by a period of terrible wars, between some of the Māori and some of the white people. The conflict tended to overshadow the great good which had happened before, causing it to be forgotten or denied. There was much unoccupied land in parts of New Zealand when the white settlers began arriving after 1840, but some conflict was probably inevitable. The great awakening also occurred substantially before large-scale white settlement began. As a result, church history in New Zealand is often seen as starting with the beginnings of the white settlement.
In 1867, the main Anglican historian of this Māori movement, Bishop William Williams, published the story, entitled “Christianity Among the New Zealanders”. In his earlier ministry he had translated the New Testament into the Māori language; had seen many of the events he described, and had access to many CMS documents of the relevant time. In 1989, the Banner of Truth Trust publishing house in Edinburgh, issued a reprint of this book. These publishers expressed their belief that this great movement was “a work of grace...which ranks second to none in the annals of missionary endeavour”.
Colonisation is defined as “the action or process of settling among and establishing control over the indigenous people of an area” or “the action of appropriating a place or domain for one’s own use”.
Christian missionaries in the 1800s were not expected to colonise, but set up mission stations to preach the gospel, teach cultivation and farming practices, translate the New Testament and introduce reading and writing in English. Missionaries were discouraged from buying land.
Missionaries purchased land for the Church Missionary Society (for mission churches and buildings) and later to put land in reserve for Māori when settlers moved in. Private missionary land purchases were controversial from the outset. A few missionaries thought it wrong to buy or own land under any circumstances; the Church Missionary Society issued confused policy on the subject; and there was settler and New Zealand Company resentment. Missionaries who bought land did so to provide for their families. They argued their case with earnest conviction, but in Henry Williams’ case, to no avail – ultimately, he was disconnected from the Church Missionary Society, until later reinstated.
In December 1830, in a letter to his brother-in-law Edward Marsh, Henry Williams foresaw the need to buy land for his children, who at 15 would cease to be supported by the Church Missionary Society, and become a burden on their parents. In a virtual absence of potential occupations, farming was a solution. “We have written to the Society respecting the propriety of purchasing land on their [the children’s] account; we do not wish to commence anything of the kind without their approbation. At the same time, I do not see what else can be done”.
Māori eventually benefited from the decades of early missionary work when the Christian revival transformed them from killers and cannibals into people who experienced God’s love and forgiveness and became ambassadors of that goodwill.
MOTHERS who used to trample their children to death, when infants, to get rid of them, because they were troublesome, are now possessed of the love of God, and love their offspring. MEN whose hands were against every man, and every man’s against them, who used to kill and devour their enemies in war, are now walking in the fear of God, and in the comforts of the Holy Spirit, who love their neighbours as themselves, and all mankind for Christ’s sake. CHILDREN who were ignorant and debased by the corrupt example of their parents, are now instructed and taught in schools, and can read fluently in the New Testament Scriptures.Evangelical Revivals in NZ – Māori culture, page 12
Colonising NZ wasn’t easy when Māori became a curious dichotomy, in the words of the authors: an “incongruous mixture of the good and the bad” when the first settlers arrived, brought by the New Zealand Company in 1840.
The missionaries had given Māori with a better standard of living through farming techniques, new crops and access to better food, clothing and shelter and they were better prepared for the commercial opportunities that presented with the arrival of the settlers through missionary work.
For the first few years of European settlement Māori quickly grasped openings to provide goods and services in order to obtain new products, and construct or commission European-style houses, churches and boats. They grew large quantities of potatoes, vegetables and melons, sold fish, shellfish and pork, expanded into wheat and barley, provided firewood, and exchanged weavings and carvings for money or clothing and/or good blankets.
They also provided guiding services, ferry services across rivers and bays, and assisted new settlers to travel to their land blocks and construct their first houses. Some crewed on European-owned ships, but most Māori were reluctant employees, preferring to maintain their traditional lifestyle and independence.
Initial trades were often for barter or exchange, but Māori quickly learned the value of money, as one settler commented: “…they were remarkably shrewd at driving a bargain, had a very appreciative opinion of their commodities, and a critical knowledge of the value of the ‘utu’ (money) and the goods taken in exchange”.
A simple gauge of Māori health is life expectancy at birth which was 28–30 years before colonisation and 73.4 years for Māori males and 77.1 years for Māori females in 2021.
Māori were undoubtedly better off in every aspect of their lives from colonisation, but that’s not what Pihama says.
Colonisation impacts on our children through the removal of every part of our cultural framework that enabled us to keep our children safe.
But Māori didn’t keep their children safe pre-colonisation when they practised abortion, infanticide and the sport of war, until they adopted Christian values.
And I think that model of the nuclear family, the domestic unit, is actually an unhealthy model for a culture of people who are used to having a collective relationship.
I can’t disagree that collective relationships are stronger than the nuclear family unit, but Māori have always had the choice to retain that social structure. It’s not the responsibility of anyone to tell someone else how to structure their own family. The question must be asked: were tribal bonds taken from Māori or did they choose to abandon them?
“Historical trauma caused by colonisation is the root cause of intergenerational issues, particularly child abuse within Māori families,” Pihama said.
This statement has absolutely no basis in history and appears a very poor excuse for not taking proper care of your children.
Suze sees herself as a New Zealander whose heritage shaped but does not define, and believes unless we protect our rights and freedoms they will be taken off us by a few powerful people. This article was first published HERE
13 comments:
Leonie Pihama has typical Maori logic. Blaming everything on the pakeha is so much easier than facing facts.
Just another cop out by Māori who can’t be bothered working at giving their children the same chances in life as anyone else.
Have you noticed how the maori party are always defending the gang members and if the police turn up, then the maori party are critical of the police? Their culture appears to support violence. Not the other way around.
Pihama certainly has a one eyed view of the inconvenient history.
Such a series of inconvenient facts, but then why let the truth get in the way of establishing a lucrative victimhood industry?
As a Christian I do believe all Suze has said. The only aspect I would add is that a desire to have Maori in sanitary more substantial housing in the early 20th Century , the younger generation was ripped away from the grandparents at the pa and put into state housing .
I had a copy of ' Washday at the Pa ' which illustrates a fairly primitive lifestyle , at the Pa with washing being done in the stream . and naked children playing in the water with all generations present.
These photos by Ans Westra were taken probably early 20th century .
This book of photographs was censored mid last century because it apparently showed Maori as fairly primitive . So you see censoring
and sanitizing of NZ history has gone on all along done by Pakeha . As a child my mother made a scrap book of NZ Maori history. in about 1920 . Probably to protect the sensitivities of children some gory bits about Hone Heke were there but nothing about cannibalism or decimation of other tribes which perhaps could cause nightmares for a child ? There seems to me to have been a determination by European to not portrait pre European Maori as savages so as to help the latter settlers view them in a more favourable light to aid assimilation ?
It has backfired, with radicals now writing this heavily biased rubbish to conform with Marxism when what we need surely is Christian charity. and its other values.
And, behind this false narrative, the He Puapua agenda continues..... and becomes more irreversible as each day passes.
Suze, thank you for your article; it is refreshing to read a piece based on evidence. Here are a couple more quotes to add to your collection. I note that Darwin visited the Bay of Islands in 1835 and his claim that Maori infanticide ended that year coincides with your mention of missionary work and the Christian revival of 1835 and 1845. It seems that colonization stopped Maori infanticide.
Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man, 1871, p. 288.
https://www.globalgreyebooks.com/descent-of-man-ebook.html
"The Maories of New Zealand have long practised infanticide; and Mr. Fenton (95. 'Aboriginal Inhabitants of New Zealand: Government Report,' 1859, p. 36.) states that he 'has met with instances of women who have destroyed four, six, and even seven children, mostly females. However, the universal testimony of those best qualified to judge, is conclusive that this custom has for many years been almost extinct. Probably the year 1835 may be named as the period of its ceasing to exist.'"
Te Matapunenga, s.v. ‘Roromi’
In 1838, the House of Lords in London appointed a Select Committee to inquire into the state of affairs in New Zealand. A relation of Te Rauparaha, ‘Nayti’ (Ngatai), who had travelled to England on a French whaler and stayed for two years with Edward Wakefield in Chelsea, was called to give evidence to the Committee. The official record includes the following exchange:
Q. New Zealand women kill their children sometimes, do they not?
A. Sometimes they do.
Q. Why do they kill their children?
A. Because they have too many.
Q. They kill boys as well as girls?
A. Yes, they kill Boy or Girl when they have too many.
Q. They kill them when they are quite little?
A. Yes, he comes to Day, and then they kill him.
Maori only hear the Pihama line and similar. Very, very few know beyond the standard platitudes, or want to. Or are able to understand. As evident from the interviewed hikoi marchers. The standard distorted lines are never questioned in common maori society. RNZ does not present serious analysis or criticism, just a parade of encouraged supportive articulate glib maori. Msm do not present rigorous (or any) critique of maori platitudes and propoganda statements..
This if from the Maori Messenger : Te Karere Maori, Volume I, Issue 13, 1 October 1861, Page 7
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MMTKM18611001.2.6
Truth does not lie. History recorded cannot be unrecorded. Sadly in NZ today we have lies that are told as truth and history rewritten to lie to us more....one ponders what the end game is for so much falacy......
This is a little goldmine of 19th century thinking, Anna. Thanks for putting it up.
The Maori Messenger: Te Karere Māori? Wasn’t that the bilingual Government funded publication edited by Hari Reweti with the aim of uniting Maori and European that facilitated Maori literacy and supported proficiency in Maori? Remind me: Was it published before or after Maoris had their language stolen from them?
Thanks Anna. I have printed a pdf copy of this as a permanent safe reference.
And bookmarked the web page - I expect to to disappear shortly with the unofficial censoring of everything that is embarrassing to Maori.
Probably the staff at Papers Past are working overtime tonight looking for more articles like this to be purged from the record.
Look at the web page - headed in large bold type fabricated te reo with the English subservient.
Another Govt Dept waving two fingers at Luxon's instructions to rectify this clearly racially biassed travesty.
Isn't it absurd and frightening that we no longer trust our Govt officials ?
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