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		Tens of thousands crowd New Zealand's Parliament grounds in support of 
		Māori rights
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		 [November 19, 2024]  
		By CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY 
		WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — As tens of thousands crowded the streets 
		in New Zealand’s capital, Wellington, on Tuesday, the throng of people, 
		flags aloft, had the air of a festival or a parade rather than a 
		protest.
 They were marching to oppose a law that would reshape the county’s 
		founding treaty between Indigenous Māori and the British Crown. But for 
		many, it was also a celebration of a resurging Indigenous language and 
		identity that colonization had once almost destroyed.
 
 “Just fighting for the rights that our tūpuna, our ancestors, fought 
		for,” Shanell Bob said as she waited for the march to begin. “We’re 
		fighting for our tamariki, for our mokopuna, so they can have what we 
		haven’t been able to have,” she added, using the Māori words for 
		children and grandchildren.
 
 What was likely the country’s largest-ever protest in support of Māori 
		rights — a subject that has preoccupied modern New Zealand for much of 
		its young history — followed a long tradition of peaceful cross-country 
		marches that have marked turning points in the nation's story.
 
 “We’re going for a walk!” one organizer proclaimed from the stage as 
		crowds gathered at the opposite end of the city from the nation’s 
		Parliament. People had traveled from across the nation over the past 
		nine days.
 
 For many, the turnout reflected growing solidarity on Indigenous rights 
		from non-Māori. At bus stops during the usual morning commute, people of 
		all ages and races waited with Māori sovereignty flags. Some local 
		schools said they would not register students as absent. The city’s 
		mayor joined the protest.
 
		
		 
		The bill that marchers are opposing is unpopular and unlikely to become 
		law. But opposition to it has been widespread, which marchers said 
		indicated rising knowledge of the Treaty of Waitangi’s promises to Māori 
		among New Zealanders — and a small but vocal backlash from those who are 
		angered by the attempts of courts and lawmakers to keep them.
 Māori marching for their rights is not new. But the crowds were larger 
		than at treaty marches before and the mood was changed, Indigenous 
		people said.
 
 “It’s different to when I was a child,” Bob said. “We’re stronger now, 
		our tamariki are stronger now, they know who they are, they’re proud of 
		who they are.”
 
		As the marchers moved through the streets of Wellington with ringing 
		Māori haka — rhythmic chants — and waiata, or songs, thousands more 
		holding signs lined the pavement in support.
 Some placards bore jokes or insults about the lawmakers responsible for 
		the bill, which would change the meaning of the principles of the 1840 
		Treaty of Waitangi and prevent them from applying only to Māori — whose 
		chiefs signed the document when New Zealand was colonized.
 
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            Thousands of people gather outside New Zealand's parliament to 
			protest a proposed law that would redefine the country's founding 
			agreement between Indigenous Māori and the British Crown, in 
			Wellington Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Charlotte Graham-McLay) 
            
			
			 
		But others read “proud to be Māori” or acknowledged the bearer’s 
		heritage as a non-Māori person endorsing the protest. Some denounced the 
		widespread expropriation of Māori land during colonization, one of the 
		main grievances arising from the treaty.
 “The treaty is a document that lets us be here in Aotearoa so holding it 
		up and respecting it is really important,” said Ben Ogilvie, who is of 
		Pākehā or New Zealand European descent, using the Māori name for the 
		country. “I hate what this government is doing to tear it down.”
 
 Police estimated that 42,000 people tried to crowd into Parliament’s 
		grounds, with some spilling into the surrounding streets. People crammed 
		themselves onto the children's slide on the lawn for a vantage point; 
		others perched in trees. The tone was almost joyful; as people waited to 
		leave the cramped area, some struck up Māori songs that most New 
		Zealanders learn at school.
 
 A sea of Māori sovereignty flags in red, black and white stretched down 
		the lawn and into the streets. But marchers bore Samoan, Tongan, 
		Indigenous Australian, U.S., Palestinian and Israeli flags, too. At 
		Parliament, speeches from political leaders drew attention to the reason 
		for the protest — a proposed law that would change the meaning of words 
		in the country’s founding treaty, cement them in law and extend them to 
		everyone.
 
 Its author, libertarian lawmaker David Seymour — who is Māori — says the 
		process of redress for decades of Crown breaches of its treaty with 
		Māori has created special treatment for Indigenous people, which he 
		opposes.
 
 The bill’s detractors say it would spell constitutional upheaval, dilute 
		Indigenous rights, and that it has provoked divisive rhetoric about 
		Māori — who are still disadvantaged on almost every social and economic 
		metric, despite attempts by the courts and lawmakers in recent decades 
		to rectify inequities caused in large part by breaches of the treaty.
 
 It is not expected to ever become law, but Seymour made a political deal 
		that saw it shepherded through a first vote last Thursday. In a 
		statement Tuesday, he said the public could now make submissions on the 
		bill, which he hopes will experience a swell of support.
 
 Seymour briefly walked out onto Parliament’s forecourt to observe the 
		protest, although he was not among the lawmakers invited to speak. Some 
		in the crowd booed him.
 
 The protest was “a long time coming,” said Papa Heta, one of the 
		marchers, who said Māori sought acknowledgement and respect.
 
 “We hope that we can unite with our Pākehā friends, Europeans," he 
		added. "Unfortunately, there are those that make decisions that put us 
		in a difficult place.”
 
			
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