Thank you, Luke.  Furthermore, your country - I learnt this from two ‘Kiwi’ 
plumbers currently living in Brixton and with whom I occasionally carouse - is 
impressively in the van with respect to counter-seismic building codes. As I 
understand it, new and retrofitted houses in eg Christchurch, lying along major 
faults, are designed to rest on, so to speak, skis, uncoupling easily from the 
foundations in a ‘big one'. This is precisely the opposite of what we do here 
in the San Francisco Bay Area, where bolting down the superstructure to the 
base using Simpson (brand-leader) Ties is standard practice and more or less 
mandated by architects, contractors and insurance jockeys. 

And speaking of casual racism, the vernacular tipis and reedhouses of the local 
tangata whenua  - in which one might even relish a Richter 7 or 8 event - are, 
under the current Euro-settler dispensation, laughably 'out of code’. 

Kī tōnu taku waka topaki i te tuna,

Iain   
---------------------------- 
On 25 Mar 2019, at 13:44, Luke Munn <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Sure, the Springbok protests were hugely formative, but I would say boiling 
anything down to one event is placing too much emphasis on it. 

With respect, dating the 'beginning' of inequalities and civil unrest back to 
1981 is also a pretty Western/white perspective. Aotearoa has a long history of 
civil unrest, not least in the New Zealand wars / Land Wars beginning around 
1845. 

Since the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 between Māori and the 
Crown, New Zealand was always meant to be something other than the "Britain of 
the South Seas".

While the Treaty certainly has been contested and willfully misinterpreted 
historically, it nevertheless establishes a key framework for cultural 
relations.

What it sets up is a multiracial but bicultural society made up of "tangata 
whenua" (people of the land, indigenous New Zealanders) and "tangata tiriti" 
(people of the treaty, non-indigenous New Zealanders).

So when you see Muslim boys perform a haka (ceremonial dance), or see, as I did 
on Sunday, a 'Love Aotearoa Hate Racism' rally led by tribal flags and 
concluded by karakia (Māori prayers), then you're seeing what the Treaty 
should, in its best moments, establish. 

Of course there are lots of other factors too. The fact that NZ has 
historically been relatively open to immigration produces an everyday 
cosmopolitanism, to the point where Auckland is one of the most culturally 
diverse cities in the world. Jacinda Ardern's strong leadership in response to 
the attacks was another. The reaction against some of the worst aspects of 
other countries, like mass shootings in the US, would be another. 

Still, as you noted, more needs to be done. Casual racism against 'asians' in 
the context of our housing crisis is just one recent example. I just wanted to 
push back a little on the Springbok tour as single catalyst, and suggest a 
longer, and less overt lineage of cultural relations in New Zealand. Our 
country is small and young, but it's still complicated! :-)

best, Luke


On Mon, 25 Mar 2019 at 23:08, David Garcia 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Simon Perkins a colleague at Bournemouth University sent me these reflections 
on the background to the impressive national response to the Christchurch 
massacre:
If you see the recent attacks in Chch as part of a more long-standing and 
generalised effort to deal with the country's inequalities then for me the 
beginning of this was the civil unrest and the aftermath of the 1981 Springbok 
Rugby Tour of NZ. What happened was that in protesting the inequalities in 
South Africa there became a wide-scale recognition that NZ also had real 
issues, which needed to be dealt with. The result was that there was there was 
a groundswell to make the country work for all. As the NZ historian Jock 
Phillips explains it "the tour represent[ed] the emergence of an independent 
Pacific nation to challenge the previous image of New Zealand as the 'Britain 
of the South Seas'. Playing rugby against South Africa was consistent with New 
Zealand's traditional identity as a loyal servant of the British Empire. The 
anti-tour movement had a different vision. New Zealand could be seen as an 
example of an independent, racially tolerant society, a moral exemplar." 
https://springboktournewzealand.weebly.com/aftermath.html 
<https://springboktournewzealand.weebly.com/aftermath.html?fbclid=IwAR3mnOg37XBO0s6fjfPo0yrcNza37esDPzGXcnn4gBTOGCxy-K4qipe6Ylc>

And so, the public outpouring that we've seen since the mosques shooting are in 
someways a direct beneficiary of the Tour, where I think the attacks have 
shocked the country into realising that again - more needs to be done. BTW. if 
you're interested, this is a documentary made by the anti-tour 
protester/director Merata Mita: https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/patu-1983 
<https://www.nzonscreen.com/title/patu-1983?fbclid=IwAR25vYV2FWkoxXQTs5OFeSYMkjBAOtb2CP2-UWOpp-agGY7Ho_t6FaYzy0o>
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