The New Zealand Herald

‘ Caring Maori leaders must step up to stop damaged youth going to pack’

- Alan Duff comment

I think gangs like Black Power and the Mongrel Mob are more a social nuisance, a scary visual image and an inordinate cost on the justice and health and social welfare systems, than a real danger to society. But they could be if we sit back and let them flourish.

In my first novel I had a chapter on a gang sub-titled “House of Angry Belonging”. Youth and young men join a gang because they’re hurt and angry and, like all humans, want to belong. Virtually all come from abusive childhoods.

But they’re not the Italian mafia infiltrati­ng every level of society and milking every public purse. New Zealand gangs have zero influence on government. About 4000 out of about 4.5 million is not a contagion.

They are boys in men’s bodies with stunted and warped emotions whose only values are blind, unthinking loyalty to the gang. With no moral standards as we know them; booze, drugs and violence stupefy any chance of self-reflection.

The vast majority are dunderhead­s, that much is obvious. Or why would one major gang bark, whimper, howl and growl like dogs if intelligen­ce was present?

Gang individual­s act on pack impulse and/or peer pressure. We can presume that conversati­onally every one of these emotionall­y stunted galoots is vacuous.

The Mongrel Mob member who punched a school kid because he was wearing the colours of a rival gang does not see or feel life as we do. He is like a dog acting on command, being what his abused life reduced him to: a human beast.

These broken-hearted, constantly angry losers were made into what they are. They are not part of society and paid the unemployme­nt benefit on economic grounds of at least reducing their criminal offending.

These people contribute nothing to society. Indeed, they extract disproport­ionately. Your columnist has a soft spot for those born into less blessed homes and difficult circumstan­ces. But not for gang members, much as I understand their background­s. There’s a line, boys, and you crossed it.

Any group that hunts in a pack and lives by violence is a menace. Whether Maori, Anglo-Saxon, Hispanic, Asian or European. They’re a type, a category of childhood hurt and/or inherited outlook.

But in New Zealand we are uniquely positioned to perhaps do something about it. That is: attack at source the breeding grounds for these people. Ask any gang member how he grew up and chances are he’ll talk of a welfare-dependent mother who had lots of violent boyfriends, themselves welfare recipients. If he had a father it was likely a violent one. A kid grows up surrounded by boozing, drug-taking adults, what do you think he’s going to end up? A brain surgeon? A banker? A teacher? In business? Our country’s disadvanta­ge is, we reward losers; pay a benefit to everyone from a gang member to a scoundrel acting out a chronic back problem.

A kid who grows up without any role models — other than their hardpresse­d teachers at school — may as well have loser stamped on his forehead. Neglectful, abusive parent(s) should not be incentivis­ed to stay that way. Good parenting should be monetarily rewarded, at least until such incentives are no longer required. Single mothers who live with a boyfriend should not be punished by having her benefit reduced and treated like a criminal. The bloke rarely stays around long and the mother still has her children to raise.

This problem starts at the top: with Maori leadership leading by example. Maori problems are less a government problem than they are to us as a people. Most of our leadership seems focused on lobbying Parliament — with hands out and giving little to the flaxroots. We, Maoridom and the country, need people with service in mind not selfintere­st. Helping lift our people is not a career, it is a duty; at least for those in a position to help. If we can halve the hardcore 15-20 per cent, the problems go down exponentia­lly.

Keep hammering education. Already tertiary numbers for Maori have risen several hundred per cent the past 20 years. A few more Maori columnists to push the message out there would be good. The new “gangs” will have moral values and hunt as aspiring individual­s not a vicious pack.

So come on, you caring Maori talkers, do some walking.

These brokenhear­ted, constantly angry losers were made into what they are.

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