Manawatu Guardian

Mural fosters spirit of unity

City backs project to help celebrate its cultural diversity

- Judith Lacy

Abird of a chalky kind rested in Palmerston North to mark Race Relations Day. Palmerston North artist Atefe Abadi created a mural boundary in chalk in Te Marae o Hine/The Square on March 21.

The bird symbolises freedom from the restraints of racism imposed upon people, she says. The bonded fingers signify unity between races. The budding plant symbolises the start of a world without discrimina­tion, while the sun is considered the illuminati­on of a better life before us.

Passersby were invited to contribute to the mural by writing, painting and drawing within it to bring together a collective spirit of unity.

English Teaching College students were among those who stopped to contribute to the mural.

Abadi is from the Iranian capital Tehran, where she was a teacher and a painter. She and her husband, who is doing a PhD at Massey University, have been living in Palmerston North for a year.

Palmerston North City Council supported the project.

Community developmen­t adviser Somayyeh Ghaffari says it was about celebratin­g the multicultu­ral diversity of Palmerston North.

The Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion encourages the community to keep the conversati­ons going “so we can all gain a better understand­ing of our beliefs and values, and celebrate what we have in common”.

The day is observed annually on March 21, when police in Sharpevill­e, South Africa, opened fire and killed 69 people at a peaceful demonstrat­ion against apartheid in 1960.

The United Nations has dedicated the day to achieving the goals of the Convention for the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion.

New Zealand signed this convention in 1966 and ratified it in 1972.

The New Zealand History website states Race Relations Day was first formally celebrated in 2003 with the theme, Hands Up for Kiwis of Every Race and Place.

 ?? Photo / Judith Lacy ?? Palmerston North artist Atefe Abadi with part of the mural she created the boundary of to mark Race Relations Day.
Photo / Judith Lacy Palmerston North artist Atefe Abadi with part of the mural she created the boundary of to mark Race Relations Day.

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