Reading the article on the Smithsonian’s Enola Gay exhibition and visiting the Auckland War Memorial Museum, there was a clear theme. Both acknowledged the tension between commemoration and scholarship in relation to conflict. This got me thinking about how we often learn most from the things that make us slightly uncomfortable – when our opinions are challenged by the views of others.

In the article on the Enola Gay exhibition, a quote from historian Bernard Lewis is used:

“What happened, what we recall, what we recover, what we relate are often sadly different… The temptation is often overwhelmingly strong to tell it, not as it really was, but as we wish it to have been.” 1

Especially when faced with conflicts of national significance, it can be tempting to justify the violence by instead focussing on a “victory” that was won, and the chivalry of soldiers to fight for the freedom of our country. The article stated how America and Japan’s ambivalence towards the effects of their actions in WWII “involve a common reluctance to think too carefully or long about anything that threatens the national sense of legitimacy,” and sadly, I think this is all too true. 2 In a New Zealand context, serious conversations around colonisation are few and far between, dominated by the Western, colonial culture New Zealand has developed.

Since the beginning of the Māori protest movement in the 1970s, Waitangi Day celebrations have been called out for what they really are: celebrations of an agreement that has not been honoured. Celebrations of colonialism. A protest group, Ngā Tamatoa, once appeared at Waitangi for the commemoration on February 6th, 1973. 3 The group wore black armbands, declaring the day was one of mourning for the 25.2 million hectares of Māori land that had been lost, and along with it, the tūrangawaewae of hundreds of Māori communities. 4 The protest was a call for the government to “honour the Treaty”.  5 For how can Māori express their identity as tangata whenua when the whenua has been taken away from them? 

Ngā Tamatoa and groups like them have caused moments that spark this crucial conversation of colonisation and equity. These are moments when society is forced to view history and conflict through the lens of the minority. In these uncomfortable moments, we recognise that although our “national sense of legitimacy” is threatened by acts of the past, we can make steps now towards an equitable nation. The results of the Māori Language Petition of 1972 (Māori Language Day and the teaching of Te Reo Māori in schools), or the efforts of the Waitangi Tribunal to ensure Māori land is returned, are testament to this. 6

Colonisation, the physical conflict that led to it, and the personal and societal conflict that arises from it, are not issues that can be fixed overnight. But the willingness to get a bit uncomfortable, finding that middle ground between commemoration and scholarship, is needed to bring change and equity.

 

References

  1. Kohn, “History and the Culture Wars: The Case of the Smithsonian Institution’s Enola Gay Exhibition,” 1037.
  2. Kohn, 1037.
  3. Keane, “Ngā rōpū tautohetohe – Māori protest movements – Waitangi Day protests.”
  4. Walker, Ka Whawhai Tonu Matou: Struggle Without End, 211.
  5. Keane, “Ngā rōpū tautohetohe – Māori protest movements – Waitangi Day protests.”
  6. Walker, Ka Whawhai Tonu Matou: Struggle Without End, 211.