Saturday, May 21, 2016

Moriori history and Treaty politics: four myths

Yesterday's episode of TV One News included a report from the Chatham Islands, where Treaty Negotiations minister Chris Finlayson has been meeting with Moriori. 

The Moriori are the indigenous people of the Chathams, which they call Rekohu, and their leaders have been trying to hammer out a Treaty of Waitangi settlement with Finlayson and the Crown. Back in the late '90s Moriori appeared before the Waitangi Tribunal, and talked about how their homeland had been invaded and enslaved by two Maori tribes in 1835, and how the New Zealand government had later allowed those same tribes to gain legal title to the land they had stolen from Moriori. In 2001 the Tribunal published its Rekohu Report, which backed many of the arguments Moriori had made. 


Chris Finlayson is also negotiating with Ngati Mutunga o Wharekauri, a group descended from one of the two iwi that invaded Rekohu in 1835. 


Last night's news report from the Chathams has prompted a long, ill-tempered, and often ill-informed debate on facebook, where many commenters have ridiculed the notion that the Crown should sign a settlement with Moriori. 


Here are four misconceptions that I noticed recurring during the debate on facebook. 


1. Who attacked and enslaved the Moriori?


The first misconception is that all Maori were somehow responsible for invading Rekohu and enslaving the Moriori


Only two small iwi from northern Taranaki, Ngati Mutunga and Ngati Tama, invaded Rekohu in 1835. These iwi rejected Moriori offers of peace and partnership, defiled Moriori sacred sites, massacred hundreds of men, women, and children, and made the remnant of the Moriori population into slaves. The genocide that began in 1835 was recorded by both Pakeha residents of the Chathams and by Moriori, and it was proudly remembered by the members of Ngati Mutunga who appeared before Chatham Islands sessions of the Native Land Court in 1868, 1870, and 1872. Believing that their conquest of the Chathams gave them mana whenua over the islands, the iwi's elders described their killing and enslavement of Moriori in some detail before the court. 


In the first decades of the nineteenth century iwi were regularly at war, as the muskets and cash brought by Europeans destabilised Aotearoa. The invaders of Rekohu had themselves been forced out of their homelands, and taken refuge on Somes Island in Wellington harbour. They were not acting on behalf of any Maori government or any other pan-iwi organisation. (It was in the 1840s and '50s, in response to pressure from Pakeha settlers and land speculators, that the concept of a pan-Maori identity developed. In the 1858 Waikato chief Potatau Te Wherowhero became the first Maori king.)


2. Are Moriori just Maori with a funny name? 


The second misconception is that Moriori are Maori. 


Many Maori commenters on facebook have insisted that Moriori are nothing more than an iwi of Aotearoa. Tama Rua claimed that the language and culture of Moriori are 'almost identical' to that of Maori. Gerald Patena claimed bluntly that 'Moriori are Maori'. 


Many of the Maori who want to claim that Moriori are merely an iwi are reacting to a myth that was created a century ago by the amateur scholars Elsdon Best and Percy Smith. After misinterpreting some Maori oral history, Best and Smith decided that both the Moriori of the Chatham Islands and the Tuhoe were the remnants of a Melanesian people who had lived all over New Zealand for centuries, then been driven into the Ureweras and out to the remote Chathams by the ancestors of the Maori. Best and Smith's theory was destroyed by HD Skinner, New Zealand first professional anthropologist, who visited the Chathams after World War One and discovered skeletal, linguistic, and cultural evidence to show that the Moriori were a Polynesian people closely related to Maori. Skinner's findings have been confirmed and extended by later generations of scholars. 


Unfortunately, many Pakeha still hold to the old myth of the Moriori as a pre-Maori people. New Zealanders exasperated by the persistence of the myth sometimes create their own falsehood, by claiming Moriori are not only Polynesians but a tribe of Maori. 


It is true that Moriori, as a Polynesian people, are related by blood and language to Maori. But Moriori are not Maori and they do not claim to be Maori, as a look at the publications of the Hokotehi Trust, the organisation that represents them, will very quickly show. Moriori claim that they arrived on Rekohu about a thousand years ago from an island or islands in tropical Eastern Polynesia, then travelled to mainland New Zealand, where they intermarried and traded with Maori, before becoming isolated on the Chathams. Some scholars prefer to think that Moriori are descendants of very early Maori from the Cook Strait region who got blown to the Chathams and were isolated there. 


Whatever the truth about the exact origins of the ancestors of the Moriori, there is no doubt that during centuries of isolation the people of Rekohu developed a culture very different to that of their fellow Polynesians in Aotearoa. Moriori called themselves tchakat henu, not tangata whenua; the gorgeous, freeflowing artworks Moriori made on trees and rocks lacked the hei tiki motif and the complex patterning of classical Maori carving; Moriori lived without the complicated social hierarchies of Maori; Moriori became pacifists while Maori became expert in warfare. 


It is reasonable, then, to say that Moriori and Maori belong to the same extended family, but that they are different peoples: the two indigenous peoples of our country. If Maori are the tangata whenua of Te Ika a Maui and Te Wai Pounamu, then Moriori are the tchakat henu of Rekohu. 


In recent decades, faced by a Moriori cultural renaissance and by Moriori Treaty claims, Ngati Mutunga and their allies have tried to claim that Moriori are no longer a distinct people, but have instead assimilated to Maori. Such rhetoric reminds me of the way redneck Pakeha often insist that Maori are no longer a distinct people but simply New Zealanders. 


The assimilationist argument is wrong when it is made by Pakeha against Maori, and wrong when it is made by Ngati Mutunga and their supporters against Moriori.


3. How did early European visitors to the Chathams treat Moriori? 


The third misconception is that Europeans did not commit atrocities against Moriori in the nineteenth century. 


Few of the Pakeha who talk about the evil deeds of Ngati Mutunga and Ngati Tama know that the Moriori population had already declined by about a third during the decades between the 'discovery' of Rekohu by Europeans in 1791 and the invasion of 1835. Parties of sealers and whalers often landed on the Chathams in the early nineteenth century, and eventually established settlements. Although some of them established friendly relations with Moriori, others killed and raped islanders. All of them spread diseases to which Moriori had no immunity. 


In the decades after Ngati Mutunga and Ngati Tama massacred Moriori, Europeans harvested hundreds of skeletons from the beaches of the Chathams. Skeletons and skulls were sold to collectors and museums in Europe, and thousands of Moriori teeth ended up in the surgeries of European dentists, where they were attached to European mouths. 


4. Why should the Crown be responsible for Moriori suffering? 


The fourth misconception is that the Crown has no responsibility for the suffering of Moriori, because that suffering was caused only by Maori, and occurred before the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840. 


Many of the Pakeha who make this argument also insist that by signing the Treaty in 1840 Maori accepted that British law would prevail over all of New Zealand. If they hold such a view, then they logically should consider that the British Crown had an obligation to protect the legal rights of the Moriori. For twenty-two years after the signing of the Treaty, the Moriori remained enslaved in their homeland. The British annexed the Chathams to New Zealand in 1842, but did little or nothing to assert Moriori rights. They neither intervened to free Moriori from their Ngati Mutunga and Ngati Tama captors, nor tried to stop the harvesting of Moriori skeletons by European graverobbers


It was not only in the Chathams that the Crown showed itself indifferent to Moriori suffering: in the 1840s a group of Ngati Mutunga and their Moriori slaves emigrated to the Auckland Islands, where they lived close to Hardwicke, a British colony that boasted several hundred inhabitants and a magistrate. No attempt was made  to free the Moriori slaves brought to the Auckland Islands. 


Even after the freeing of the Moriori, the Crown continued to act against the interests of Rekohu's indigenous people. In 1868, 1870, and 1872 the Crown organised Native Land Court sessions on the Chathams to decide who should have title to the archipelago. As I noted earlier, Ngati Mutunga elders spoke at length to the court, describing how they had conquered the Chathams and enslaved its people, and claiming that these deeds gave them ownership of the islands. The Crown agreed, giving 97% of disputed lands on the Chathams to Maori and only 3% to Moriori. It is this injustice, in particular, that Moriori are hoping to undo in the settlement they are now negotiating with the Crown.


[Posted by Scott Hamilton]

15 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

In 1862 Aucklanders knew the potatoes they were buying from the Chathams were harvested by slaves:
http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=DSC18620906.2.5&srpos=4&e=--1839---1862--10--1----0chatham+islands+slaves--
(scroll down)

3:24 am  
Blogger ryan bodman said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

8:46 am  
Blogger ryan bodman said...

So, from your perspective, is it also the Crown's responsibility to adjudicate on the numerous injustices perpetrated on mainland NZ, during the 1820s-30s, of which the situation on the Chathams is closely connected? If so, than the rohe of Waikato-Tainui, Ngati Toa and many others would need to be reconsidered, though I don't think the Crown has (or should have) the authority to do that. For the Moriori, the line in the sand of the 1840s is very unfortunate, but I'm not sure there's an alternative, without opening a can of worms that will leave many more unsatisfied. As a disclaimer, I work in the Treaty industry, so maybe my critical faculties have been compromised on this issue, by the party line.... Cheers, Ryan.

8:51 am  
Anonymous Scott Hamilton said...

Hi Ryan,

If Ngati Mutunga and Ngati Tama had left Rekohu shortly after invading the islands, then I think he line in the sand rule you cite would apply. But they stayed. If I remember rightly - and it has been a while - the Rekohu Report argues that the two iwi did not have the right to take possession of the islands by conquest, because such a custom was not recognised by Moriori, whereas it was part of Maori custom.

I think that if inter-iwi injustices were perpetuated by the Crown then they might become subjects of Treaty settlements. Perhaps an example is the sale of a lot of Kawerau land in the Waitakeres to the Crown by Ngati Whatua in the early nineteenth century. If I remember rightly - and again it's been a while - Tribunal reports discussed the need to ameliorate the consequences of this injustice.

I am very grateful to the 'treaty industry' for all the marvellous books it publishes! The Rekohu Report is a fine and intelligent synthesis of sources. It must have taken courage to produce, given the way Ngati Mutunga were denouncing the Moriori claim to Rekohu as 'pretentious'. It's remarkable how much the rhetoric of Ngati Mutunga o Wharekauri resembles that of Pakeha rednecks.

9:25 am  
Blogger ryan bodman said...

I agree, the Tribunal reports are incredible historic documents, and it's great that they are freely available to everyone. I have to admit, I haven't read the Rekohu report, but that's an interesting argument. I'm interested to see how the Tribunal argued against the customs of the invaders; will have to have a look when I get a chance. Michael King reflected on your comment of how 'the rhetoric of Ngati Mutunga o Wharekauri resembles that of Pakeha rednecks', detailing the cleansing of the iwi's history for the benefit of an exhibition at Te Papa. Have a good one, Ryan.

11:31 am  
Blogger Barney said...

If the Moriori came from "Eastern Polynesia" could there be a link to the mystery disappearance of the Rapanui (Easter Island) peoples

1:33 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Are Moriori a different race? Recently I see the skulls returned to NZ a few weeks ago at Te Papa from overseas were both Maori and Moriori so how is it known they are different. Scientific measurements of skulls do show a difference, is this how they knew who or which were Maori or Moriori skulls. As stated in publications by the Hokotehi Trust claim not to be Maori then if this is the case then the Treaty of Waitangi is a treaty between Maori and the crown. SIx million given to Moriori and also at the same time an amount of money was also given to the Chinese people for cultural redress maybe this should be where it should begin and end.






6:50 pm  
Anonymous Scott Hamilton said...

I would guess that the skulls are adjudged Moriori based on their collection history, anon - the museums holding them will in many cases have a record of where they came from and when. Moriori skeletons and skulls were harvested on a large scale in the middle and later nineteenth century, partly because so many of them were still lying about the beaches after the massacres of 1835. There are some idiosyncracies in the skulls of Moriori - most notably, the foreheads are sometimes noticeably wider. The Moriori were adjudged the first indigenous people of the Chathams by the Waitangi Tribunal's Rekohu Report, and as I understand it their claim for compensation refers to the failure of government to protect them after 1840 - they remained slaves of Ngati Mutunga and Ngati Tama for decades after the signing of the Treaty - and the decision of the Native Land Court to give nearly all of the Chathams to Maori in the 1860s.

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