Although New Zealand today is widely regarded internationally as having fair relations with its
indigenous Maori peoples compared to its immediate neighbours, and
multiculturalism is considered as a significant positive to its
cultural identity and growing diverse communities,
Maori--like most
Indigenous peoples throughout the world--have struggled with
land rights issues since first colonisation by
Pakeha settlers. The 'Māori protest movement' is a broad indigenous rights movement in
New Zealand. While this movement has existed since Europeans first colonised New Zealand its modern mandate emerged in the early 1970s and has focused on issues such as the
Treaty of Waitangi, Māori land rights, the
Māori language and
culture, and
racism. It has generally been allied with the
left wing although it differs from the mainstream left in a number of ways. Most members of the movement have been
Māori but it has attracted some support from
Pakeha New Zealanders and internationally, particularly from other
indigenous peoples. Notable successes of the movement include establishment of the
Waitangi Tribunal, the return of some Māori land, and the Māori language being made an official language of New Zealand.
Background
There is a long history of Māori resistance to
Pakeha (New Zealand European) domination. From the 1840s to the 1870s various Māori
iwi (tribes) fought against Pakeha encroachment, in the
New Zealand Land Wars. They also used petitions, court cases, deputations to the
British monarch and New Zealand and British governments, passive resistance and
boycotts. Much of this resistance was based around religious movements such as
Pai Marire and
Ringatu.
Prophets such as
Rua Kenana and
Te Whiti are sometimes seen as early Māori activists. The
Māori King movement was also an important focus of resistance, especially in the
Taranaki and
Waikato regions. Some Māori also worked within Pakeha systems such as the
New Zealand Parliament in order to resist land loss and
cultural imperialism.
From
World War II, but especially from the 1950s, Māori moved from rural areas to the cities in large numbers. Most Pakeha believed that New Zealand had ideal
race relations and although relations were good compared to many other settler societies, the apparent harmony existed mostly because the mostly urban Pakeha and mostly rural Māori rarely came into contact. Māori urbanisation brough Pakeha prejudice and the gaps between Māori and Pakeha into the open. In addition, many Māori had difficulty coping with what was essentially an alien society. Some turned to alcohol or crime, and many felt lost and alone. Several new groups, most prominently the
Māori Women's Welfare League and the
New Zealand Māori Council emerged to help urban Māori and provide a unified voice for Māori. These groups were conservative by later standards but did criticise the government on numerous occasions.
The first significant Māori involvement in conventional protest came during controversy over the exclusion of Māori players from the 1960
All Blacks rugby tour of
South Africa. However the protests tended to be organised by Pakeha.
The Māori Affairs Amendment Act
In the mid 1960s the
National government proposed to make Maori land more ‘economic’ by encouraging its transfer to a Pakeha system of land ownership. The
Maori Affairs Amendment Act 1967, as it became, generally allowed greater interference in Maori landholding, and was widely seen amongst Maori as yet another Pakeha land grab. The plans were strongly opposed by virtually every Maori group and organisation. Despite this, the Act was passed with only minor modifications.
The Act is generally seen as the catalyst for the Maori protest movement, and the evidence certainly points to this. However the movement can also be seen as part of a wider
civil rights movement which emerged across the world in the 1960s.
Waitangi Day protests
The first act of the Māori protest movement was arguably the boycott of
Waitangi Day by a handful of Māori elders in 1968 in protest over the Māori Affairs Amendment Act. A small protest was also held at parliament, and was received by
Labour MP
Whetu Tirikatene-Sullivan. Although both were reported in the newspapers they made little impact. In 1971 the ceremonies were disrupted by the protest group
Nga Tamatoa (The Young Warriors) who chanted and performed
haka during speeches, and attempted to destroy the flag. Protest has been a feature of Waitangi Day ever since.
Māori language and culture activism
One of the early goals of the Māori protest movement was the promotion of
Māori language (te reo Māori) and
culture. Both of these had been generally ignored by the education system and Pakeha society in general, and schoolchildren were actively discouraged from speaking Māori in school (although, contrary to popular belief, there was never a ban on this, rather individual schools took it upon themselves to punish students who spoke Māori). Until Māori became largely urbanised after World War II, this did not seriously damage the language since most Māori spoke it in their communities. However urbanisation produced a generation of Māori who mostly grew up in non-Māori environments and were therefore less exposed to the language. In addition, many parents felt that it was much more important for their children to be fluent in English and made no attempts to pass on the language. As a result, many leaders of Māori protest were not fluent in Māori and felt that this was a major cultural loss. In the face of official indifference and sometimes hostility, Nga Tamatoa and other groups initiated a number of schemes for the promotion of the language. These included Māori Language Day, which later became
Māori Language Week; a programme which trained fluent speakers as teachers; and
kohanga reo: Māori language pre-schools. Later there were campaigns for a Māori share of the airwaves. These eventually resulted in the iwi radio stations and a
Māori Television channel, all of which actively promote the language. Activists also campaigned to change the names of landmarks such as mountains back to their original Māori names, and to end the mispronunciation of Māori words, especially by newsreaders and other broadcasters.
Many Māori cultural forms, such as carving, weaving and performing arts such as
haka had gone into decline in the nineteenth century. From the early twentieth century
Apirana Ngata and others had made efforts to revive them, for example setting up inter-tribal
kapa haka competitions and getting state funding for meeting houses. Māori activists continued this tradition, but their primary focus was on stopping the abuse of Māori cultural forms. The best known example of this was the
Haka Party Incident. A group of
University of Auckland engineering students had for many years performed an obscene parody haka as a
capping stunt. Repeated requests to end the performance were ignored and eventually a group of Māori assaulted the students. Although the activists' actions were widely condemned by Pakeha, they were defended in court by Māori elders, and the students' stunt was not performed again. Most recent Māori protest in this sphere has been directed against non-New Zealand groups and businesses who use the Māori language and cultural forms - sometimes copyrighting them - without permission or understanding. Since it is internationally known, the
haka of the All Blacks is particularly vulnerable to this treatment, for example in the
2007 Canterbury women's rugby union team haka controversy.
The Treaty of Waitangi
The
Treaty of Waitangi has always been a major focus of Māori protest. It is often used to argue for particular aims, such as return of unjustly taken land, the promotion of the Māori language, even when other potential strategies exist and might be more effective.
The Treaty to the mid 20th century
Main articles: Treaty of Waitangi
The Treaty of Waitangi was an agreement, made in 1840, between the
British Crown and various Māori chiefs. Although major differences between the Māori and English language versions of the Treaty make it difficult to ascertain exactly what was promised to who, the Treaty essentially gave the British the right to establish a governor in New Zealand, stated the rights of the chiefs to ownership of their lands and other properties, and gave Māori the rights of British citizens. Although the Treaty is generally seen as marking the beginning of the New Zealand nation, it was largely ignored for more than a century after its signing, and various legal judgements ruled it irrelevant to New Zealand law and government. Despite this, Māori frequently used it to argue that their rights were being denied.
Campaign for ratification
From about the mid nineteenth century, Māori campaigned for proper recognition of the Treaty, generally asking that it be
ratified or otherwise made a part of New Zealand law. In the 1960s and the 1970s, Māori activists continued this campaign, sometimes making it a focus of their
Waitangi Day protests. In 1974 the Treaty was given some recognition with the
Treaty of Waitangi Act. This established the
Waitangi Tribunal, which was given the task to investigating contemporary breaches of the Treaty. However since it was not able to investigate historical breaches, was underfunded, and generally unsympathetic to claimants, most Māori were disappointed by the Tribunal.
'The Treaty is a Fraud'
Possibly as a result to the failure of the Waitangi Tribunal to achieve much, many Māori activists in the early 1980s stopped asking for the Treaty to be honoured and instead argued that it was a fraudulent document. They argued that Māori had been tricked in 1840, that either they had never agreed to sign away their sovereignty or that Pakeha breaches of the Treaty had rendered it invalid. Since the Treaty was invalid, it was argued, the New Zealand government had no right to sovereignty over the country. This argument was broadly expressed in
Donna Awatere's book ''Māori Sovereignty''.
Activism and the Tribunal
In 1985 the Treaty of Waitangi Act was amended to allow the Tribunal to investigate historic breaches of the Treaty. It was also given more funding and its membership increased. In addition, the Treaty was mentioned in several pieces of legislation, and a number of court cases increased its importance. As a result, most Māori activists began to call once again for the Treaty to be honoured. Many protesters put their energies into Treaty claims and the management of settlements, but many also argued that the Tribunal was too underfunded and slow, and pointed out that because its recommendations were not binding the government could (and did) ignore it when it suited them. Some protesters continued to argue for Māori sovereignty, arguing that by negotiating with the Tribunal Māori were only perpetuating the illegal occupying government.
Land
The longest-standing Māori greivances generally involve land. In the century after 1840 Māori lost possession of most of their land, although the amount lost varied significantly between
iwi. In some cases the land was purchased legitimately from willing Māori sellers, but in many cases the transfer was legally and/or morally dubious. The best known cause of Māori land loss is the
confiscation in the
Waikato and
Taranaki regions following the
New Zealand Land Wars. Other causes included owners selling land without fully understanding the implications of the sale (especially in the early years of colonisation); groups selling land which did not belong to them; Pakeha traders enticing land owners into debt and then claiming the land as payment; the conducting of unrequested surveys which were then charged to the owners, and the unpaid bills from this used to justify taking the land; levying of unreasonable rates and confiscation following non-payment; the taking of land for
public works; and simple fraud. Upon losing land, most iwi quickly embarked on campaigns to regain it but these were largely unsuccessful. Some iwi received token payments from the government but continued to agitate for the return of the land or, failing that, adequate compensation.
The return of lost land was a major focus of Māori activists, and generally united the older, more conservative generation with the younger 'protest' generation. Some of the best-known episodes of Māori protest centred on land, including:
Bastion Point
Main articles: Bastion Point
Bastion Point in
Auckland was originally part of a large area of land owned by
Ngati Whatua. Between 1840 and 1960 nearly all of this was lost, leaving Ngati Whatua with only the Point. In the 1970s the
third National government proposed taking the land and developing it. Bastion Point was subsequently occupied in a protest which lasted from January 1977 to May 1978. The protesters were removed by the army and police, but there continued to be conflict over the land. When the Waitangi Tribunal was given the power to investigate historical greivances, this the
Orakei claim covering the Bastion Point area was one of the first cases for investigation. The Tribunal found that Ngati Whatua had been unjustly deprived of their ancestral land hence Bastion Point was returned to their ownership with compensation paid to the tribe by the Crown.
Raglan Golf Course
Main articles: Eva Rickard
During the Second World War, land in the
Raglan area was taken from its Māori owners for use as an airstrip. Following the end of the war, the land was not returned but instead leased to the Raglan Golf Club, who turned it into a golf course. This was particularly painful for the original owners as it contained burial grounds, one of which was turned into a
bunker. A group of protesters led by
Eva Rickard occupied the land and also used legal means to have the land returned, a goal which was eventually achieved.
1975 Land March
In 1975 a large group of Māori and other New Zealanders, led by
Whina Cooper, walked the length of the
North Island to
Wellington to protest against Māori land loss. Although the government at the time, the
third Labour government had done more to address Māori greivances than nearly any prior government, protesters felt that much more needed to be done. Following the march, the protesters were divided over what to do next. Some, including
Tame Iti remained in Wellington to occupy parliament grounds.
Foreshore and Seabed

The foreshore and seabed hikoi outside
parliament.
Main articles: New Zealand foreshore and seabed controversy
In 2003 the
Court of Appeal ruled that Māori could seek customary title to areas of the New Zealand
foreshore and
seabed, overturning assumptions that such land automatically belonged to the Crown. The ruling alarmed many Pakeha, and the
Labour government proposed legislation removing the right to seek ownership of the foreshore and seabed. This angered many Māori who saw it as confiscation of land.
Labour Party MP
Tariana Turia was so incensed by the legislation that she eventually left the party and formed the
Māori Party. In May 2004 a
hikoi (march) from
Northland to Wellington, modelled on the 1975 land march, was held, attracting thousands of participants. Despite this, the legislation was passed later that year.
Sporting contact with South Africa

Early activism over the issue of sporting contacts with apartheid South Africa
Main articles: 1981 Springbok Tour
New Zealand has a long history of sporting contact with
South Africa, especially through
rugby union. Until the 1970s this resulted in discrimination against Māori players, since the
apartheid political system in South Africa for most of the twentieth century did not allow people of different races to play sport together, and therefore South African officials requested that Māori players not be included in sides which toured their country. Despite some of New Zealand's best players being Māori, this was agreed to, and Māori were excluded from tours of South Africa. Some Māori always objected to this, but it did not became a major issue until 1960, when there were several public protests at Māori exclusion from that year's tour. The protest group
Halt All Racist Tours was formed in 1969. Although this was an issue in which Māori were central, and Māori were involved in the protests, the anti-tour movement was dominated by Pakeha.
In 1973 a proposed
Springbok (South African rugby team) tour of New Zealand was cancelled. In 1976 the South African government relented and allowed a mixed-race
All Black team to tour South Africa. However by this time international opinion had turned against any sporting contact with South Africa, and New Zealand faced sigificant international pressure to cut ties. Despite this, in 1981 the Springboks toured New Zealand, sparking mass protests and
civil disobedience. Although Pakeha continued to dominate the movement, Māori were prominent within it, and in
Auckland formed the
patu squad in order to remain autonomous within the wider movement.
During and after the Tour, many Māori protesters questioned Pakeha protesters' commitment to racial equality, accusing them of focussing on racism in other countries while ignoring it within New Zealand. The majority of Pakeha protesters were not heavily involved in protest after the Tour ended, but a significant minority, including several anti-Tour groups, turned their attention to New Zealand race issues, particularly Pakeha prejudice and the Treaty of Waitangi.
Leaders of Māori protest
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Donna Awatere
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Whina Cooper
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Joe Hawke
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Hone Harawira
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Tame Iti
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Dun Mihaka
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Miraka Szászy
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Eva Rickard