The Northland Age

Understand the language

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Tuia 250 is the government-funded programme marking 250 years since Captain James Cook of the British navy first visited Aotearoa.

The word ‘tuia’ is a Ma¯ori verb. Its English translatio­ns include to lash, to bind, to lace together. But in the case of the Cook commemorat­ion, the Ministry of Culture and Heritage paired it with the English noun ‘encounters.’ Whether they intended to infer that ‘encounters’ and ‘tuia’ mean the same thing, that is what they are promoting, and it is neither correct nor ethical.

In her article ‘Cook and Ethical Rememberin­g,’ Tina Nga¯ta (Nga¯ti Porou) distils several years of discussion­s with rangatahi on the subject into 10 guidelines for teaching what happened 250 years ago. Guideline 1 is to ‘know the story,’ and I covered that last week. This week I cover three further guidelines, starting with ‘to analyse and understand the language.’

As Ms Nga¯ta notes, it is really important “to analyse and understand the language long used by the colonising culture as a tool to mask and minimise colonial crime while demonising indigenous resistance… (because) words like ‘encounters’ and ‘arrival’ function to neutralise the fact that an armed military vessel, arriving without invitation to claim lands, killing people while doing so, is actually an invasion.”

Guideline 3 is to ‘focus on imperialis­m, rather than indigenous culture.’ Imperialis­m is a wide-reaching machine that continues to deliver harm across the globe, so it’s vital that our future generation­s be equipped to identify it and take on the challenge of addressing it. Many people still struggle to recognise Cook or his superiors as invading white supremacis­ts. But any project that is based upon a sense of entitlemen­t to the lands and lives of non-white people is clearly white supremacis­t and imperialis­t.

As Ms Nga¯ta says, “Ignoring the impacts of imperialis­m will not make it go away. Instead it will merely leave a vacuum for imperial apologists to fill.”

Guideline 4 is to ‘contextual­ise our story in the greater story of imperialis­m.’ Ms Nga¯ta notes that, “Cook’s invasion has a level of relevance at a national level for us. But at an internatio­nal level, ours was just one of many nations between the 15th and 18th centuries that were severely impacted by Imperial expansion.”

Understand­ing how the Doctrine of Discovery initiated the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, as well as the expansion of empires across the African continent, North and South America, is essential for any student of colonial and imperial history. But Ms Nga¯ta sounds a note of caution here to “be mindful that this is harrowing history. So we need to undertake this discussion in an ageappropr­iate way, with careful observatio­n of how the informatio­n is ‘landing’.”

"Many people still struggle to recognise Cook or his superiors as invading white supremacis­ts. "

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