MAHANA-THE MOVIE
Haare
Williams Papakura 1 February 2016
On a Saturday
night Haare Williams joined throngs of kids flocking into the small Te Karaka
picture Hall. Some, lucky to have horses
tethered the sweaty beasts to the fence outside, a few carried saddles into the
hall. For these youngsters; Brown,
Rutene, Ruru, Kerekere, Hitaua, Williams and Ihimaera, Roy Rogers and Hopalong
Cassidy were clean cut westerns. Most,
like us from Mangatu and Waituhi walked. Getting home was a fun bit too.
Culture is a proud driver to have in
work and life as it is for Lee Tamahori who used it with deft. He knows whakapapa. He knows tikanga. And he knows the place of te reo as the soul
of Aotearoa New Zealand. I had not met
him before our first around the table briefing when I sat between him and Witi
Ihimaera, author and the source of Mahana, the movie. Running through the first reading of the
script with cast and crew, Tamahori looked the consummate director. He
expected no less than authenticity from a youthful team.
Mahana is a story
set in Patutahi, a tiny rural village west of Gisborne. The movie is inspired by Ihimaera’s
Bulibasha which traces the shifting fortunes of two rival, shearing families,
that highlight their ups and downs in a shifting landscape.
Temuera Morrison stood off to one side, looking every bit
like Tamihana Mahana. He sauntered in late, old hat and boots and greying
stubble to match. With wit, humour and
commanding voice he was every bit the patriarch of the
movie whanau. Tamihana Poata at that
moment had landed.
This is a yarn about our land and people, their core values
about morality, ethics, justice and conservation. Reverence is there, a component missing in
today’s schools. Stories reveal who we
are. Stories provide a rationale for why
we do things the way we do and what shaped us into a modern, vibrant
nation. Mahana is the archetypal tough
head of his household who sits at the table and in his saddle sometimes looking
tough sometimes scary all the time self-assured. We see him stuff up too. Calamity is an element of a good in a
story. The ingredients of a gripping
tale are all there; tension, deception, betrayal, drama conflict and
reconciliation.
The hero is Ramona with a gentle strength played out by
Nancy Bruning who bears the lines of anguish on her face. Ramona, mother
with her restorative soul holds her children close. Her strength and devotion is comforting in
the ongoing feud. Nancy Bruning portrays
wahine toa, the fine but fragile attributes of a woman with inner strength so
like Ngati Porou women. Morrison
strikes gold with a stellar performance, arguably his best. He is patriarchal. Mature.
He is also fresh. His best is yet
to come.
The gang is typical of shearing gangs whose
reputation was built around the speed of the hand piece. My dad, Te Wehinga was a shearer of
note in Turanganui-a-Kiwa. He did not
have to go looking for contracts. They
found him. His three sons were noted
shearers too. I was at Teachers
College. It made him miserable if one of
his shearers mishandled the confused animals.
These are post war years when Maori found fellowship in gangs or whanau
with its own coterie of values for
boundaries within whanau kin groups. Many
of his generation were still shell-shocked by war. Some returned to find the festering sores for
tribal lands after fighting so valiantly for king and country. Many struggled to keep their families.
Maori were also in the freezing industry, forestry and on
waterfronts. They were also building
homes, highways and bridges. With their relative prosperity, they were able to
invest, build homes and buy motor
vehicles popular models were the 39 Chevy and the 39 V8 Ford. These jobs powered social mobility. It was Maori, in the main who carried the
country upon their backs towards another millennium. They hardly, if ever merit a mention by
public commentators.
The post war years saw the emergence of Maori seeking
work. Set against this backdrop they
made the social shift from the nurtured background of rural New Zealand to an
urban setting. Maori entered the
professional work force essentially as teachers and nurses. The seventies ushered in major social,
cultural, economic and political changes.
It was a cultural and political watershed for Maori society with
increasing activism. Maori challenged
government over its neglect for the 130 years before. A new wave of Maori leaders emerged
from the relatively polite concerns voiced publicly by pre-war Maori
leaders, now replaced by an assertive, confrontational voice in which the
institutions of the modern state: parliament, education, courts and the media
were held to account. The vanguard for this shift was a younger urban educated Maori
who argued for justice. They gained support from iwi based Maori like Tuaiwa
Rickard, Whina Cooper, Titewhai Harawira, and university based intellectuals in
Pat Hohepa and Ranginui Walker.
Then there was the urban relocation with its consequences of social dislocation. Waitangi was the hot call of the seventies. Matiu Rata was a senior minister in Kirk’s government. Kirk sent two frigates to Mururoa and stopped a Springboks tour. Small boats halted two US warships in their tracks in mid- Waitemata. Whina Cooper led lobbyists to the steps of parliament with a list of grievances. Dick Scott wrote ‘Ask that Mountain’ and Judith Binney Redemption Song. The hit-word of the seventies educational lexicon was ‘biculturalism.’
By the mid-seventies, New Zealanders did not consider
marae-based arts as art at all. That changed quickly when The New Zealand
Artists and Writers Association in 1973 met for the first time. They converged as strangers at Tukaki in Te
Kaha as disparate carvers and weavers, artists and writers, poets and
philosophers, dancers, musicians and music makers, architects and film
makers. Amongst them were luminaries
like Hone Taiapa, Ngoingoi Pewhairangi, Wiremu Parker, Hone Tuwhare, Ralph
Hotere, Harry Dansey, Katerina Mataira and others. And the list continues to grow. The
Association influenced the decision to take Te Maori; a milestone in the Maori
cultural renaissance showcasing traditional Maori arts was taken to a world
stage. This was only one part of a
burgeoning Maori nationalism and culture that gathered momentum that
politicised contemporary Maori artists.
Within this cultural resurgence we saw a new wave of Maori
film-makers flex their cinematic muscle in Barry Barclay, Don Selwyn and Larry
Parr followed by Merata Mita, Taika Waititi and Lee Tamahori. They directed movies which allowed a muted
Maori voice to be heard before a largely uniformed public. What is especially important is Maori telling
their own story and communicating it to a receptive world.
Yes, I applaud the Dalmatians in
wine-making, the Dutch in farming, Chinese in the goldfields, Indians in
marketing and Pasifika in work.
But! But, have we given a second
thought to a group that built a culture for work, who in the 50s-60s-70s became
a veritable back for building this nation.
They are the forgotten generation of our rural and industrial culture.
They prospered yes, and so did the nation.
That prosperity however came to a sudden stop when the searing blades of
Rogernomics with privatisation, asset sales and the free market theology kicked
in. Dole queues got longer and the poor
got poorer.
We talk a lot these days about Maori youth being
disconnected from their origins but this is also true of Pakeha kids. Many of our kids don’t hear their own stories
so how can they own them? How can they
learn that they were never born to fail?
Younger generations need to hear stories of dads and mums, uncles,
aunts, and grans all the way along a whakapapa trail and know why they too are
heroes. The Maori world is littered with
great men and women. We have something
no-one else has. Maori culture is what attracts long queues of tourists to our
shores. It is after all, a major
contributor to the uniqueness that is Aotearoa New Zealand.
In the closing
minutes of Mahana, we see so much wairua (living spirit) that I glowed with
pride for the way the script binds characters and actions to a unified
climax. My favourite scene is ... e hika
ma, you’ll just have to see this movie.
Our kids, Maori and Pakeha will love Mahana. You too will stand, salute
and applaud when the credits roll.
Aroha is a winner.