Open Letter to Te Runanga o Ngapuhi
Media release
David Rankin
Po Box
128
Waimauku
Ph 8154321 x 8820
Open Letter to Te
Runanga o Ngapuhi
E te teina Sonny, Tena Koe
A week ago, I wrote an open letter to the Runanga, expressing some concerns that are widespread through Nga Puhi. If one good thing has come from this action, it is that dozens of people have started to reflect on what it means to be Nga Puhi.
Since last week, certain people affiliated with the Runanga have made public comments about me in emails to others. In any professional organisation, such comments would result in disciplinary action and possibly even dismissal, but I am not going to respond to name calling and will leave those individuals to contemplate their own mana when they stoop to what seems like hate speech. Two individuals in particular have made some very nasty comments, and they should be aware of the depth of anger their comments have created among several kaumatua who have called or visited me in the weekend. The fact that one member of the runanga questioned my own whakapapa led one kaumatua to say he was outraged by the runanga. I hope that the hard-working and committed chairman of the runanga will be able to take the appropriate action to educate some of his staff.
The whole issue erupted when a journalist who was interviewing me contacted the Runanga to find out a bit about my background. A person from the runanga, and I am close to finding out who, told the journalist that I had no right to speak on behalf of any Maori in Nga Puhi, because only the runanga could do that. This was what prompted the letter.
I have no axe to grind with the runanga, but certain individuals in it are causing real harm to our culture. What they need to realise is that it is whakapapa that makes us Ngapuhi. Without that, we cannot identify as Ngapuhi. Claiming that whakapapa, rangatira and tohunga lines are no longer important, and that our history is in the past and should be forgotten, is shocking – I don’t know of any other iwi in the country where runagna members would even think like this, let alone put such statements into print. It signals a sick state of cultural awareness among the individuals concerned, and reminds me of the colonised way of thinking that used to prevail in New Zealand in the 1950s.
Of course, new structures, such as runanga, are needed. Times change, and we must change with them, but it is vital to maintain our mauri – which is a Ngapuhi mauri. I would be interested to know how well-informed some of those in the runanga who have been smearing me across the country are about Ngapuhi whakapapa. Maybe the opportunity will present itself sometime soon where all these lingering concerns can be brought out in the open.
I have
received numerous calls of support in the past few days from
very senior people in Ngapuhi. If, as one of the runanga
members writes, whakapapa is a thing of the past, I would
challenge them to make those statements at a hui in front of
these kaumatua and myself: face-to-face.
Finally, as for the statement that these matters should not be brought out in public, maybe those people who have made these statements should look into our history. Heke, Kawiti, Hone Heke Ngapua, Hone Toia, Ihaia Kuao, Hoterene, Te Ripi Wihongi, Hemi Tupe, Kaka Porowini and many others did exactly that. It is the tika way for certain issues when they have reached boiling point, as I believed this one is about to, that they be cooled in front of everyone. I, for one, have nothing to hide.
To tuakana
David Rankin
cc Helen Clark
cc
Parekura Horomia
cc Donald Brash
cc Jerry
Brownlee
cc Dover Samuels
cc John Key
cc Tariana
Turia
cc Pita Sharples
cc Hone Harawira
cc John
Tamihere