Table of Contents
What has happened?
- New Zealand’s Maori Party Tuesday launched a petition to officially change the country’s name to “Aotearoa”, which means “land of the long white cloud” in the indigenous
- Te Reo Maori language.
- While launching the campaign, the party also urged the Jacinda Ardern-led New Zealand government to restore the Maori names for all towns, cities and place names.
- “It is well past time that Te Reo Maori was restored to its rightful place as the first and official language of this country.
- We are a Polynesian country – we are Aotearoa,” the party which campaigns for indigenous rights said in its campaign.
- “Tangata Whenua (the indigenous people) are sick to death of our ancestral names being mangled, bastardised, and ignored.
- It’s the 21st Century, this must change,” it added.
- The party said fluency in the native language fell from 90% in 1910 to 26% in 1950.
- “In only 40 years, the Crown managed to successfully strip us of our language and we are still feeling the impacts of this today,” the party said,
- Adding that only 3% of the people living in the country current speak the language.
New Zealand Vs Aotearoa
- The tribal population in New Zealand believes the name Aotearoa was first given by Kupe, an East Polynesian explorer who figures in Maori tales somewhere around 1200-1300 AD.
- As per legends, when Kupe, his wife Kuramarotini, and crew were sailing to find out what lay beyond the horizon, they spotted a large landmass shrouded in white cloud in the distance.
- It was then Kuramarotini shouted ‘”He ao! He ao! He Aotea! He Aotearoa (A cloud, a cloud! A white cloud! A long white cloud!)”.
- The history behind the country’s present name goes back to the 1640s when Abel Tasman, a Dutch explorer with the Dutch East India Company (VOC), sighted the South Island.
- The country then subsequently appears on Dutch maps as
- “Nieuw Zeeland”, named after the Dutch province of Zeeland.
- A century later, English navigator Captain James Cook set foot on the Island and went on to draw detailed and accurate maps of the country for the first time.
- In Cook’s map, he mentions the country as “New Zeland”
The conflict
- While the term Aotearoa is often interchangeably used in New Zealand and also on some official documents, including the country’s passport,
- Many in the country believe that Aotearoa was originally used to refer only to the North Island, rather than the whole country.
- Some believe the name emerged only a few hundred years ago as Maori’s never had a name for these lands.
- Criticising the name-change petition, New Zealand’s former deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters said that changing the country’s name and town and city names is “just dumb extremism”.
- “We are not changing to some name with no historical credibility,” Peters said in a tweet.
referendum
- Earlier in July, a call for a public referendum on the name change was raised by National Party member Stuart Smith.
- He demanded that until the referendum is carried, the usage of the term Aotearoa should be banned from usage in public documents.
- Several other protests including campaigns with signs saying “we live in New Zealand, not Aotearoa”, have also taken place in New Zealand against the Maori party’s demand.
- Earlier in July, a call for a public referendum on the name change was raised by National Party member Stuart Smith.
- He demanded that until the referendum is carried, the usage of the term Aotearoa should be banned from usage in public documents.
- Several other protests including campaigns with signs saying “we live in New Zealand, not Aotearoa”, have also taken place in New Zealand against the Maori party’s demand.
- However, Maori supporters argue that the name finds a source in Maori oral histories.
- Historian Dr Rawiri Taonui argues that the name finds a source in Maori oral histories and blame critics for being ignorant towards older Maori traditions.
- “Taonui, who is an expert in Maori oral history, cites 30 to 40 examples between 1846 and 1861. The origins of those oral histories, handed down generation to generation, are likely much older,” Godfrey said.
conclusion
- While Prime Minister Ardern is yet to remark publicly on the latest petition,
- She had in 2020 said it was a “positive thing” that the word Aotearoa is interchangeably used within the country.
- “However, an official name change was not something that we’ve explored,” Ardern had said.
Q) In 1893, New Zealand became the first country to do what?
- Abolish slavery
- Legalise same-sex marriage
- Give women the right to vote
- Give workers paid holidays
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