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David
Round
David
Round teaches law at the University of Canterbury and is author of
"Truth or Treaty? Commonsense Questions about the Treaty of
Waitangi".
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
The
Enemy of Nationhood
David
Round
13 December 2009
There
was a poem which my mother had learnt off by heart as a girl
and portions of which she could long remember and recite to
us. It was, I
later discovered,
Whittier
’s Barbara Frietchie, and it tells of a true episode in the American
Civil War when Confederate forces, occupying a town in the
north, decreed on pain of death that all Union flags in the
town should be taken down. Heroic old Barbara refused, and
‘Shoot if you must this old grey head
But
spare your country’s flag’ she said.
The
officer was moved.
‘Who
touches a hair of yon grey head
Dies
like a dog! March on!’ he said.
A
nation’s flag is a precious thing. It arises out of a long
history; it grows with a people and tells their story. The
New Zealand
flag is no exception. On the blue of the Pacific Ocean shines
the Southern Cross, the great guiding constellation of our
skies, and in one corner the crosses of St George, St Andrew
and St Patrick ~ England, Scotland and Ireland ~ tell of our
British ancestors ~ the explorers and pioneers who found New
Zealand a barbarous, albeit beautiful, wilderness of warring
tribes, and created by their patient heroic labours the land
of peace and comparative prosperity we have inherited.
Certainly, there is nothing specifically Maori here, and it
might be nice if there were, although Maori crossed the blue
Pacific guided by the stars, and all Maori, after all, have
British ancestry, even if they prefer to ignore or deny the
fact; but this is our flag. It is a pretty accurate reflection
of our nation and of the traditions and ideals which have
shaped and made us and, until recently anyway, inspired us. We
shall need those ideals again in future.
It is perhaps a bit of an accident of history, but then
so are many things. We have never been a great flag-waving
nation; we are an undemonstrative, laconic people; but all the
same, this is what we are. Our ancestors, Maori and British,
have fought and sometimes died for it. A flag is not just a
pretty piece of cloth. It is not just a corporate logo, to be
updated or perhaps completely changed the next time the
business is redefining itself or repositioning itself in the
global marketplace. It is not just ‘a symbol’, as three
gold balls, say, symbolise a pawnbroker, or a blindfolded
woman with scales and sword signify justice. It is more than
that; and that is why the Prime Minister’s decision that the
Maori sovereignty flag will fly from Parliament, Premier
House, government buildings and the Auckland Harbour Bridge
next Waitangi Day is so foolish and ominous a sign.
The
word ‘nation’ comes ultimately from the Latin verb nascor, nasci, natus sum, meaning to be born. A nation was
all those people born of a common ancestor. It was, then, a
giant family. Apart from total conquest and absorption, other
peoples could become part of ones nation only by adoption, an
arrangement far commoner in the ancient world than it is now.
By adoption the incoming people became the descendants of the
same ancestor; they could therefore participate in the state
religion, which usually involved the worship of the deified
ancestor or of the god or gods who had entered into a solemn
covenant with the ancestor, and who were the guardians of the
state.
No-one
would suggest that our citizenship ceremonies go quite so far.
But there is a profound truth underlying these arrangements. A
nation is not just a group of people who happen to live on the
same piece of land. We could not call the inhabitants of
China
, say, or the former
Yugoslavia
a nation. A nation is made up of people who have a great deal
in common. There are always differences and interests, of
course, but the members of a nation believe that more unites
them than divides them. They therefore are prepared ~ not
without grumbling, certainly, from time to time ~ to put the
common good before the interests of their particular tribe.
One
of the common unthinking slogans of those who a couple of
years ago were agitating for a new national flag was that we
needed one which would ‘reflect our diversity as a nation’
This is complete nonsense. Diversity is difference. The more
diversity there is in anything, the less there is in common.
That is what diversity means. It is impossible to have a flag
(which epitomises who and what we are ~ what we have in
common) which reflects the fact that we are ‘diverse’ and
have nothing in common.
Tribalism
is the enemy of nationhood. The flying of a Maori sovereignty
flag on our national day may be looked upon as a meaningless
gesture by those for whom nothing is sacred, and who see our
own flag only as a meaningless bit of cloth. They ‘know the
price of everything and the value of nothing’. But Maori
sovereignty enthusiasts do not see it as an empty gesture, and
neither should anyone else. It is an insult to those who serve
and love our nation’s flag, for no other flag can be as
good, and Maori sovereignty and division is the enemy of the
one
new Zealand
nation of our very own flag. There may be arguments as to what
‘exactly’ Maori sovereignty means. One radical will claim
it is one thing, another another. But this at least is
perfectly clear ~ that it means that those who fly it do not
want to be part of the same nation the rest of us are in. They
will continue to want the funding of course. But for the rest,
they consider those outside the tribe to be ~ what were Hone
Harawira’s words again? ~ just people to be used, exploited
and at the same time hated. We have to be grateful to Hone ~
which is more than he is to us, of course, for the manifold
blessings of European civilisation ~ in that at least he
reminds us of what we are up against. He is the true voice of
the Maori party. No other voice is possible.
Dr
Brash was absolutely right when he made his wonderful Orewa
speech, and Phil Goff was absolutely right when he recently
similarly warned of the dangers of racial division. It is a
depressing indication of the madness now an unquestioned part
of our national life that those calling for racial equality
and respect for the rights of all, including the foreshore and
seabed as our common heritage, are automatically condemned as
racist.
New Zealand
is indeed a deeply racist country. But the racism lies in a
race-based political party, racially-selected Parliamentary
seats and members, a special racial electoral roll, race based
sports teams, schools and units within schools, television
stations, government departments, trusts and financial
assistance galore, legal recognition of racial privilege,
treaty indoctrination on every conceivable occasion.
Universities now have special Maori graduations. No public
ceremony in our secular country is complete without Maori
elders and karakia.
Every new appointee in the public service is welcomed with a
powhiri…..None of this is diminishing. It is growing. We are
not working towards becoming one nation. We are walking in
completely the opposite direction.
And
not only is this racial distinction growing, it is absolutely
clearly not working in its alleged aim of producing a happier
tomorrow and relieving poverty and distress. A small tribal
elite benefits. But how many of the benefits trickle down to
the increasingly desperate alienated Maori underclass? They
are vastly over-represented in all the wrong statistics ~
poverty, crime, prison population, truancy and illiteracy,
unemployment, alcoholism and drug dependency, domestic
violence and child abuse. If
New Zealand
were to extract the Maori (and, to a lesser extent, Pacific
Islander) figures for these social ills from our statistics,
we would appear as one of the happiest and best countries in
the world. But instead, we are marred by this sad and growing
underclass. The social welfare system subsidises its breeding,
and so we are willingly creating the most dreadful social
problem for the future. No government seems interested in
stopping this vicious circle. Maori in
Australia
, where many of energy and enterprise have gone to live, are
just as prosperous as anyone else. But here so many are mired
in a system that seems designed to trap them in hopelessness.
Liberals love to talk about this racism, as revealing our own
wickedness and selfishness, while ignoring the racism of Maori
privilege. What we must realise is that these two racisms are
the two sides of the same coin.
It
may be that for as variety of reasons Phil Goff is unlikely to
become Prime Minister, although you never know. Look at that
unexciting John Major. But the National Party would do well to
remember the effect of Don Brash’s Orewa speech.
At the time it was given the National Party was in
serious, perhaps even terminal decline. Despite the almost
universal disapproval of media commentators ~ practically
everyone announced loftily that New Zealanders would not fall
for this shameful obvious playing of ‘the race card’ ~ the
speech’s sentiments struck a chord with ordinary people who
recognised its truth. Those New Zealanders have not gone away,
and they have not changed their opinions. How will they vote
next time?
And
what will happen in the near future when the money runs out?
When the world’s lenders refuse, or are simply unable, to
support any longer a lazy nation, too cowardly to confront its
own problems, and which has been living beyond its means for
the last generation? When the world economy collapses, the
price of oil starts to soar (and our whole economy and
civilisation rests on oil ~ without it tourism and
agriculture, for a start, as they are currently practised, are
unthinkable) and climate change brings woe? Then, even more
pressingly than now, we will not be inclined to spend our last
precious pennies on support for the underclass, or for anyone
except ourselves. Without the anaesthetic of social welfare,
however, ugly voices will be raised. And not just voices. Bella,
horrida bella et Thybrim multo spumantem sanguine cerno.
Hone Harawira’s recent outburst is only a taste of things to
come. Dreadful changes are coming. We all of us urgently need
to realise that we have to look after ourselves far more, and
that unity in the face of hardship and peril is vitally
necessary. Yet Maori sovereignty perpetuates the hateful myth
that everything is the white man’s fault, that Maori have
nothing in common with him and would be better off on their
own. But with the funding, of course. To fly the flag of a
movement dedicated to the dismantling of our country shows how
foolish and blind we have become. The Maori sovereignty flag
is the enemy of the flag it will be flying next to.
To read David's previous weekly
columns, click here>>>
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