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Thursday, April 30, 2026

Geoff Parker: ANZAC Day Is About Service — Not Cultural Drift


ANZAC Day exists for a clear purpose: to honour those who served and those who died in war. It is not a general cultural showcase, nor a platform for modern identity signalling.

The historical record matters.

In the First and Second World Wars, hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders served overseas. The overwhelming majority were not Māori. While Māori contributions — particularly through the 28th (Māori) Battalion — were distinguished and rightly remembered, they represented a minority share of total service. That reality should inform how the day is commemorated, without diminishing the significance of that contribution.

In most of New Zealand’s overseas conflicts, those who served — Māori and non-Māori alike — did so under a single banner: the New Zealand flag. Units may have reflected different backgrounds, but they were not separate forces. They were part of one military, representing one country. That matters.

ANZAC Day should reflect that same unity. It is a national day of remembrance, not a collection of competing cultural expressions. The purpose is to honour shared sacrifice — not to segment it.

In recent years, ANZAC services have increasingly incorporated tikanga Māori — including karakia, waiata, and haka. These can be appropriate acknowledgements of Māori service and heritage. But as they become disproportionately prominent or overly lengthy, they risk shifting the tone of the event away from remembrance and toward performance.

That’s where the concern lies.

This is not an argument against Māori inclusion. Māori served, fought, and died — and their contribution deserves recognition. But recognition should be proportionate and purposeful, not expansive to the point where it reshapes the character of the event.

The same principle would apply to any group. No single narrative — cultural, political, or otherwise — should overtake the core meaning of the day.

ANZAC Day has endured because it is simple, solemn, and shared. It binds generations — across all backgrounds — not through difference, but through a common act of remembrance.

However, ANZAC ceremonies are becoming more performative and less centred on remembrance, which I suggest is a legitimate concern.

Geoff Parker is a passionate advocate for equal rights and a colour blind society.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

You can tell this author has never served in the military. No serviceman would say what this guy is saying. I was at the service on the weekend and it was touching and appreciated by all who attended.

Hugh Jorgan said...

Agreed. We should also be concerned about the priorities of the current military forces.

Anonymous said...

What the heck is cultural drift? Culture has always been changing. All cultures change. I guess some folks are fearful of change. Moreso the older folks. Recognising NZs unique culture is a pretty awesome thing to be doing. As is paying respects to those who have fought and died for us. An off-base read from my mate Geoff here.

Anonymous said...

And it defeats the entire argument that the maori activists have been saying all along. Why did they agree to go and fight against colonist mother england who "stole all their land" and enforced westmister law and democracy on their people? Also the war was about protecting freedom and democracy, where there is no master race of people who are above others. This also goes agsinst the maori activist beliefs. They don't like equality or democracy.. They want a tribalist state where a dictator keeps the people in check. You would think they would want nothing to do with anzac day at all.

K said...

Indeed Geoff.

Anonymous said...

Anon 8.36 here. Correction to one sentence. It should say " Why did they agree to go and fight WITH colonist mother.england...

Anonymous said...

Anon 8.36
Great point about Maori in all our overseas actions to defend democracy.
Why did Maori eagerly go into action in support of their Colonial oppressors to secure democracy on NZ, which they have subsequently destroyed ?

Anonymous said...

NZ remains a representative democracy. If you want to change that, use your vote! Everyone gets one!

Anonymous said...

The Dawn Parade in Wellington started with a karakia. Total bullshit and unnecessary. Footage of the Anzac Cove ceremony also show cased Maoridom. It’s an absolute disgrace this is being allowed to happen both here and overseas.

Anonymous said...

Exactly the same issues dominate in the current Middle East -anti -Semitism and anti Western Values including anti -democracy .
Same issues but fueled by different language - Marxism.
The trouble is now that Marxism has invaded our country along with Islamic influences which readily also uses Marxist rhetoric to further promote their aim of universal Sharia Law.
We should remember the Islamic Great Mufti of Jerusalem sided with Hitler in W. W. 2 in the same way Islam sides with Marxism now . United in the common cause of annihilating Jews and crushing Judeo -Christian values . Two billion Muslims vs seven million Jews.
The whole Maori radical agenda is also fueled by Marxist rhetoric -CRT.
We have the enemy within as well as without different language but same enemy agenda.

mudbayripper said...

The Maori activist, cultural and governing take over movement, knows no limits. It's utter distain for all things colonial only shows them for who they really are.
Maori representation at two world wars was for King and Country.
This modern movement is nasty, selfish and offensive to all who are proud to think of themselves as New Zealanders.
Be aware, unity is not the outcome they desire.
A nod to things Maori have long been an integral component of New Zealand culture, it certainly cannot dominate the culture.
We all became one people at the signing, and for 150 years, how well we did as people from all cultures.
This is no longer our direction.

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Contrary to Anon 216's conspiracy theorising, Islam has no truck at all with Marxism, which is after all explicitly atheistic, and rejects the notion of private property. It is difficult to imagine any kind of mutual accommodation between Marxism and the Sharia.
There is some commonality between Islam and neo-Marxism with regard to attitudes towards Western imperialism, but this is rather hypocritical on the part of those Muslims given the imperialistic history of Islam (e.g. the Ottoman Empire).

Anonymous said...

When the Nazi project collapsed in 1945 , the Great Mufti of Jerusalem, Al Hussein , fled to Cairo. The Soviet Union was seeking leverage in the Middle East . Israel aligned with the West . The Soviets understood something the Arabs hadn't grasped the language of the second half of the 20th century was not race and religion. It was colonisation, oppression, and self-determination. The KGB went to work ;Soviet intelligence operatives helped engineer the transformation of an Arab rejection movement into a global anti -colonial movement Mihai Pacepa the highest -ranking Soviet Bloc intelligence officer documented how the KGB crafted the Palestinian narrative as a cold war weapon. The goal was not Palestinian statehood :it was to destabilize the West's most reliable ally in the Middle East. Yasser Arafat ( photographed with Brezhnev ) was a product of this machinery . He was recruited , trained and groomed by Soviet -aligned intelligence services :;he was taught to speak ,the language of liberation while running an organization whose founding charter was the destruction of Israel by armed struggle.
By the 1970s , the Palestinian cause had become a flagship of the left - no longer a religious -nationalist movement raised in massacre and Nazi collaboration had been relaunched as a Third World Liberation struggle
complete with revolutionary aesthetics , Marxist Western academic champions and a seat at the UN.
Islam has a political entity over just a religious one. Anyone who helps them destroy Israel and the West are their friends. . Forget incompatible ethics and beliefs .

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