Herald on Sunday

The empire crawls back

- Paul Little u@PCLittle What’s your view? letters@hos.co.nz

Isee Prince Charles has come out against slavery. He was speaking in Ghana the other day and made no bones about his low opinion of the practice. “The appalling atrocity of the slave trade, and the unimaginab­le suffering it caused, left an indelible stain on the history of our world,” he thundered.

They can take a while, the Windsors, but they get there in the end.

If there were any doubts that the relevance of Charles and his family was fading, the recent visit of his son and daughter-in-law was enough to restore the most nervous monarchist’s confidence.

English traditions are still strong here. They are responsibl­e for a lot of who we are and what we do — from sports to the foreigners we will turn out to gawk at.

There may be some ambivalenc­e in our attitudes, but not enough to prevent us swooning in national ecstasy when the Duchess of Sussex uttered three mangled words of te reo Ma¯ ori in public,

And good on her for having a go, of course. No one made her. I don’t imagine she is on some sort of te reo bonus system. The countrywid­e kowtowing over her te¯na¯ koutou katoa did not reflect well on us. It made us look as though we hadn’t come very far at all from the days of Home and the Mother Country.

Meanwhile, however, down at another branch of the British Empire Inc something much more meaningful has occurred. The British High Commission is to employ a te reo Ma¯ ori teacher and Ma¯ ori cultural adviser for Commission­er Laura Clarke. Presumably paid for by the British taxpayer.

“I think New Zealand is becoming increasing­ly bilingual and I actually think you’re not credible now if you don’t make an effort,” Clarke said in The Guardian.

Let it sink in. This is a Pom speaking. And not just any Pom, but the official representa­tive of the Queen herself, that Crown whose representa­tives were responsibl­e for almost wiping the language from the face of the Earth.

The people who tried to beating the language out of the race are now having to play catch up.

It’s quite the turnaround. And it’s cause for some amazement that someone in her position can admit — “not credible now if you don’t make an effort” — what too many Pa¯keha¯ still refuse to acknowledg­e.

There is still deep division over whether te reo Ma¯ ori should be taught or not, compulsori­ly to not.

Some people dislike the idea of compulsion. Just imagine being forced to participat­e in another culture against your will. Actually, you don’t have to imagine it. Just ask a Ma¯ ori what their grandparen­ts told them about how things used to be.

I have a friend whose fluent bilingual mother refused to speak te reo to him when he was growing up because she wanted him to succeed in an English-speaking world.

The day when she finally did was one of the happiest of his life.

But the British High Commission­er is right — you can’t be a New Zealander without te reo any more.

There are tiny but telling signs everywhere you look or listen. Yesterday on the radio I heard business commentato­r Rod Oram — not to my knowledge a militant in the vanguard of tino rangatirat­anga — refer unselfcons­ciously to the mana of a business figure. In some Countdown stores you can make your selection from the kai moana and kai kinaki sections. Why, even minor British royalty can manage the odd phrase.

New Zealand’s conversion to bilinguali­sm is indeed happening, as inexorably as dripping water will wear away pounamu. Let’s just hope it doesn’t take as long.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Taylor Swift shakes off the rain, which was thankfully light, at Auckland’s Mt Smart Stadium Friday evening. It was the 28-year-old pop star’s first New Zealand stadiumsiz­ed show.
Photo / Getty Images Taylor Swift shakes off the rain, which was thankfully light, at Auckland’s Mt Smart Stadium Friday evening. It was the 28-year-old pop star’s first New Zealand stadiumsiz­ed show.
 ?? Photo / WireImage ?? Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, greet Ma¯ ori elders.
Photo / WireImage Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, greet Ma¯ ori elders.
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