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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Kevin Baxter

World Cup is a win for Māori, showcasing Indigenous New Zealand culture once banned

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Ceillhe Sperath's ancestors arrived in New Zealand nearly two centuries before Christopher Columbus sent off for the New World. Yet for much of the past two centuries the Māori, the descendants of those early Polynesian explorers, have had to fight for the rights, recognition and respect they deserved.

So for Sperath, the most important moment of this summer's Women's World Cup, which kicks off early Thursday morning Pacific time, will come just before the first game when the Tino Rangatiratanga, the red and black Māori flag, is raised above Auckland's Eden Park Stadium and "God Save New Zealand," the country's national anthem, is sung in te reo, the Māori language.

"It will be nothing short of inspirational," said Sperath, who is a member of the Ngāpuhi Northern tribe of New Zealand.

The Māori flag will fly over all four World Cup stadiums in New Zealand while the red, black and yellow Aboriginal flag will rise above six soccer venues in Australia. During a Women's World Cup that will make history for being the largest ever with 32 teams, the first to be shared by two countries and the first played in the Southern Hemisphere, the fact it will open beneath the Māori flag is a more significant milestone for New Zealand's Indigenous people.

Andrew Pragnell, the chief executive of New Zealand's soccer federation, said the gesture reflects "the partnership between the crown and Māori that is the foundation of this country." But that's a foundation that has been newly laid because for generations, Māori were subject to the same kind of prejudice, harassment and cultural genocide as Indigenous populations worldwide. In recent years, however, the Māori have made a comeback, marking one of the most ambitious efforts by a British colony to restore a language and a culture that the colonizers nearly wiped out.

"Events like these elevate our culture and remind us of how far we have come," Sperath said, "and yet how far we need to go."

In the 1990s, New Zealand began negotiating treaty settlements with Indigenous people to right historic wrongs, paying back more than half a billion dollars. Schools were established to teach the Māori language, and TV stations, websites and newspapers began carrying content in te reo. The results of those reforms have been impressive: Te reo is now an official language, and in the most recent census, taken in 2018, nearly 800,000 people, about 1 in 6 New Zealanders, identify as Māori — seven times the Māori population when Europeans first arrived at the end of the 18th century — with much of that growth coming through intermarriage.

"We are fortunate — as much as you can be if you're a colonized culture, I suppose," said Kiri Atkinson-Crean, a Māori who is head of tourism for Tauhara North Tourism, which operates cultural tourism experiences on New Zealand's North Island.

"It's just common sense. There's barely 5 million of us and we live at the bottom of the world, quite frankly. It's like, 'Here we are, let's make the most of it.' It's our collective history. That's something for European New Zealanders and for Māori New Zealanders to celebrate. We're all part of one single story. At some point, we connected, and we're creating the next chapters."

New Zealand, the last habitable land mass on Earth to be populated, was for centuries home to nothing but birds and sea life when the Māori arrived from East Polynesia in the early 1300s, led by migratory birds and navigated by the stars and ocean currents. And because they lived mostly in isolation for more than four centuries, they developed a culture and language that was distinct, if familiar in origin, from other eastern Polynesian populations.

That was nearly wiped out in a matter of decades after Europeans came to New Zealand in the late 1700s. The colonists forced the Māori to assimilate to Western traditions and brought diseases such as influenza, smallpox and measles that killed as much as half the Indigenous population which, at its height, had been estimated at more than 110,000.

The revitalization of the Māori and their culture began with the language. In 2016, the government passed the second Māori Language Act and two years later adopted a five-year strategy for revitalizing the language, in part by establishing a partnership between the crown and Te Matawai, an independent Māori advocacy group. The plan's goals were to have at least a million New Zealanders speaking basic te reo; 85% of New Zealanders valuing the language as part of the country's national identity; and 150,000 Maori under the age of 15 speaking the language as often as English by 2040.

That timeline seems overly cautious now because te reo has already gone mainstream, with emails from government officials commonly beginning with the greeting Kia ora (hello) and ending in Ngā mihi nui (thank you very much). The language is proving so popular teachers complain of being overwhelmed by classes that routinely draw hundreds of students while heavy-metal and pop groups have shot to the top of New Zealand's music charts with te reo songs, and two former prime ministers, Jacinda Ardern and Bill English, have made public addresses in the language.

Even Disney has gotten on board with its 2016 animated film "Moana," set on a fictional Polynesian island, featuring the voices of Māori actors Rachel House, Temuera Morrison, Jemaine Clement.

That's a big difference from Atkinson-Crean's school days, when children were punished for identifying as Māori, with some whipped for speaking te reo in class. Elsewhere, Māori were excluded from entering stores.

Now business leaders snap up Māori-speaking graduates because they have found including te reo phases in company documents helps brand them as being committed to New Zealand while signage in government offices, hospitals and open public spaces is in both English and Māori.

One reason for the country's progressive approach to Indigenous culture and language lie in the increasingly diverse nature of its population, especially in Auckland. More than 40% of the city's 1.7 million were born elsewhere, with significant numbers of Chinese, Indians and South Pacific islanders emigrating in recent years. As a result, a walk along the hilly streets of New Zealand's largest city commonly means exposure to a half-dozen languages.

"New Zealand wants to celebrate its uniqueness," said Sperath, the founder and director of Auckland's Time Unlimited Tours, one of a growing number of companies offering educational trips focused on New Zealand's Indigenous history. "I've never met one person who came here by mistake. Like our ancestors, you have to intentionally want to make the journey and find out why New Zealand is so special. Our Indigenous culture is our unique selling point."

There has been pushback, though, as when Simeon Brown, transportation spokesman for the opposition National Party, recently spoke out against a proposal to install bilingual road signs.

"There is always resistance to the Māori language. But the numbers are getting smaller," said Tania M. K'ai, director of the Te Ipukarea Research Institute and Centre for Language Revitalisation in Auckland. "There is now a groundswell of New Zealanders who claim Māori language and culture as part of the national identity."

And language is just part of the Māori identity.

"We always said the culture was the language. We didn't know there was this missing piece," Sperath said.

The true culture, she said, is family oriented, built around consensus and a "go along to get along attitude" that mirrors the rest of the country.

"In New Zealand, you can be anything you want to be as long as you don't force your way on everyone else," she said. "People come here from other places because we're more accepting."

Not all Indigenous traditions have been treated with equal reverence. The haka, the ceremonial war dance or challenge, is perhaps the best-known Māori cultural touchstone outside New Zealand, due to its use by the All Blacks, the country's three-time World Cup-champion rugby team. A complex combination of passion, vigor and aggression performed wild-eyed and featuring the stomping of feet and rhythmic body slapping, the haka dates to the 19th century and its spirit of defiance and protest, which inspired its creation, makes it well-suited for sports teams.

It has become a national emblem every bit as important to New Zealand's image as the kiwi bird or the silver fern.

"I think generally there's an acceptance among all Māori that if you are representing our country, then you have earned the right to perform the haka," said Anton Matthews, who, with help his from sister Māia, has tried to popularize Māori traditions at their Christchurch restaurant Fush by printing their menu in te reo and giving lessons in the language.

Schools and other education groups are also given a pass from the Ngāti Toa, the tribe that has legal guardianship of the haka, if they teach it with respect and sincerity, Matthews said. But others have crossed the line, with advertisers using the dance to sell cars and handbags. During the country's COVID-19 lockdown, anti-vaccination activists used it in their protests, drawing angry rebukes.

"That's appropriation without a doubt," Matthews said. "New Zealanders and Māori are becoming a little bit more aware of when there are businesses that are commercializing Māori culture, whether it be a design, whether it be something like the haka, or the language. They've sold it and they're making money off it."

In response, the Māori have begun pushing back themselves to defend their culture and keep it from being trivialized.

"We've been fighters for a very, very long time to try to maintain what we could of our culture," said Parereina Rawiri, part of a five-person troupe who teach and teach Māori customs, including the haka, at Auckland's War Memorial Museum. "We've actually helped other Indigenous cultures around the world to elevate their level of maintaining their histories and their languages and things like that. So we've had a lot of allies."

Allies like FIFA, global soccer's governing body and one that is traditionally conservative and hidebound. But it played against type by cheering the use of Indigenous flags and languages at this World Cup.

"FIFA recognizes the importance of Māori as tangata whenua in hosting the women's World Cup," FIFA president Gianni Infantino said, using a te reo phrase that translates as "people of the land."

For Sperath, the recognition is welcome, if overdue.

"We cannot change history, but we can learn from it to inform how we will be in the future," she said. "If you want the rainbow, then you need to put up with the rain."

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