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Saturday, September 13, 2025

Matua Kahurangi: 13 September 2025


Thank a Coloniser Day

This year, a new commemorative day has been announced: 13th September 2025 is officially “Thank a Coloniser Day.”

The purpose is simple – to give Māori the opportunity to reflect on the undeniable benefits that colonialism brought. While Māori supremacists like to claim colonisation was nothing but destruction, the reality is that without it Māori would still be living in a Stone Age society, never having invented basic technologies such as the wheel.

Instead, colonisation brought infrastructure, medicine, and opportunity. Today, Māori can sit in cushy government jobs paying $150,000 a year while doing next to no actual work. That privilege would never have existed without colonisers building the modern institutions that sustain it.

Things Māori can thank colonisers for:
  • The wheel – without which cars, bicycles, trains and modern transport wouldn’t exist.
  • Cars and roads – making travel possible far beyond tribal boundaries.
  • Modern housing – with walls, insulation, heating, and running water.
  • Clothing – replacing scratchy flax skirts with warm, durable fabrics.
  • Healthcare – antibiotics, surgery, dentistry, vaccines, and a life expectancy far higher than pre-colonial days.
  • Electricity and heating – no more huddling around smoky fires.
  • Schools and literacy – Māori didn’t have a written language before colonisation; now they can write down their own history.
  • Protecting native species – from kākāpō breeding programmes to kiwi sanctuaries, largely funded and organised through colonial systems.
  • Computers and the internet – allowing Māori activists to complain about colonisation on technology that only exists because of it.
  • Jobs in Parliament – paid six figures for pushing identity politics, a luxury unimaginable without colonial systems of government.
So on 13th September, instead of spitting on the legacy of colonisation, maybe pause and say - “cheers, colonisers – without you, we’d still be paddling in circles and eating our uncles.”

Matua Kahurangi is just a bloke sharing thoughts on New Zealand and the world beyond. No fluff, just honest takes. He blogs on https://matuakahurangi.com/ where this article was sourced.

5 comments:

glan011 said...

They could well THANK and be grateful to the original "colonisers", here in the 1800s, who brought bed linen, blankets, pots and pans, and made mud huts and slept on bracken beds, while they formed roads/tracks, fenced etc daylight till dusk. Do you think they did that for spite, or because of extreme poverty in the home country? No Social Welfare then. Start THINKING..........

Doug Longmire said...

Thanks for Toilet Paper, too !

Allen Heath said...

Nothing new there Matua, except as you point out, an absence of gratitude from the highly privileged descendants of the Neolithic nazis who benefitted from the civilizing influence of British and later, settlers. The late Robert Jones suggested maori gratitude day instead of Waitangi day and was vilified by some for such an outrageous, yet eminently sensible suggestion. Your idea, although valid will not get traction, more's the pity.

Anonymous said...

What did maori wear pre colonialism? Simply flax ( dried or some sort of linen) feathers for the privileged? Fish,dog,rat or bird leather??? Leaf and/or bark clothing? No wool because no sheep or other wool producing animals. No cotton. How did they keep warm?

Anonymous said...

They were hardy buggas