Enacting Mana Māori Motuhake during COVID-19 in Aotearoa (New Zealand): “We Weren’t Waiting to Be Told What to Do”
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Results
- Immediate Indigenous Mobilisation
- Magnitude of Indigenous Response
- Collectivising for a Common Kaupapa (cause)
- Culturally Embedded Indigenous Responses
- Growing Confidence and Capacity
- The Return to ‘Business as Usual’
We weren’t waiting to be told what to do |
I went and had a look and tracked the epidemics around the world … the impact on our Māori communities was horrific … We said, “We need a response to Māori needs. We need marae [building complex on iwi land that includes a whare tipuna (‘tribal’ meeting house)] clinics. We need foodbanks. We need to be able to provide vaccinations”. We didn’t know what that looked like. We needed to have troops on the ground. We needed to have first attenders, nurses, community workers. We need to know “Where are all the homes where our kaumātua are who won’t get access?” So, we planned as the iwi. In the room it was great. All the Māori providers came to the first meeting, along with the Hastings District Council. They said, “What can we do?” The DHB sent some people. We just came together as a collective and started to map it out. Then they got TPK [Te Puni Kōkiri | Ministry of Māori Development] to say, “Okay, what else do we need?” and they go, “Well, we need to have centralised this…” so they gave him an office. They said, “We need people in each community”, and community people put their hand up and said, “I’ll be the person in my community”. They rang each of the maraes [sic]. We had our work vans, we had four vans from here that went out to the marae and picked up kai [food] and went and delivered it. We had a list of all the kaumātua flats. We went to all the kaumātua flats and dropped resources. The girls here at work, the midwives and the nurses made packs up. We had handwashing, towels, handtowels, face masks and soap. They were all in little packs. We made up about 150 packs and just delivered them out there, with a message: “What does COVID look like? If you get these symptoms, don’t go, ring up. Ring us and we’ll come first”. The Māori response was there. We weren’t waiting for funding. We weren’t waiting to be told what to do. We were doing it because we knew it had to be done. (Jean Te Huia (Ngāti Kahungunu), CEO/Founder, Kahungunu Health Services, August 2021) [By convention, the ‘tribal’ affiliations of named Māori in this paper are placed in parentheses after their name.] |
3.1. Immediate Indigenous Moblisation
The Māori providers in particular were at the front line … they organised themselves very quickly and were smart about it … One of the things I loved was the activation of our iwi. Because even before we formally went into the lockdown, our iwi group in our rohe [region] … came together and they didn’t wait for the Crown. They just activated themselves. (Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020) [In attendance: Kaumātua Bill Kaua, Whaea Moe Milne, Gabrielle Baker, Wheturangi Walsh-Tapiata and Raranga Tāngata, Oranga Tāngata research team members]
What’s the DHB’s response for Māori? Because we’re going to die from this COVID … And there wasn’t one. So, every single week, every Monday at 11 o’clock, we had a Zui [Zoom meeting] and we wrote the plan, or we made them write the plan. (Emeritus Professor Khyla Russell (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Rapuwai), Rakatira; Dr Justine Camp (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Rapuwai), Associate Dean (Māori), Otago Medical School, University of Otago, May 2021)
Places like the [named] foodbank closed down, and that’s because the people who run it were all volunteers and they were all 60, 70 and 80. (Tracey Wright-Tawha (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Te Āti Awa), CEO, Ngā Kete Mātauranga Pounamu Charitable Trust, December 2020)
Because we knew that basically General Practices were going to start arguing about budget and money and how many they were going to get … she said, “For God’s sake, we’ll just do it then”. …(Emeritus Professor Khyla Russell (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Rapuwai), Rakatira; Dr Justine Camp (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Rapuwai), Associate Dean (Māori), Otago Medical School, University of Otago, May 2021)
3.2. Magnitude of Indigenous Response
Strategy planning, set up systems, checking on kaumātua, organising Zooms with all the key people. We received over 5,000 phone calls in those four weeks, and we made about that many as well; … we did about 1,200 food parcels; we set up a foodbank; we were doing COVID testing every day; … We received 20,000 hygiene products and broke them up and distributed them all to the marae, and then we did about two or three hundred whānau as well … We were dropping off food so whānau could isolate. We were making those wellbeing checks. We were dropping off medications to kaumātua who were isolated. It was working like a well-oiled machine. (Tracey Wright-Tawha (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Te Āti Awa), CEO, Ngā Kete Mātauranga Pounamu Charitable Trust, December 2020)
We got a phone call that afternoon saying, “Guess what? Hurry up, you’ve got to set up a kind of testing clinic within 24 h” … We all ran in on the Sunday, did all the modelling, all the funding, and had it set up by Monday morning … two days later … we had to set up a community-based assessment centre … we got that up all running within a week… (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
After about a week we noticed that no-one from the rural townships were coming into Whakatane [a town in the North Island of Aotearoa]. And why should they … the whole model that everyone should come to us. And so, we started designing the mobile units … had our mobile unit up and running during the third week of lockdown. (Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
For kaumātua … we had to put in place things like setting up computers and the internet in people’s home and teaching them how to do Zoom. So, they could stay in touch with whānau. (Associate Prof Matire Harwood (Ngāpuhi), Kaupapa Māori Primary Care Physician, March 2021)
We went back to 2018 and all our people that had been on the non-violence program–e—to make sure they were okay, got support around them as well … there was about 170 I think we rang, and we rang every week … Ringing all the supplementary community housing places and making sure all the people with mental health illness were being seen by doctors or getting access into secondary care if they needed it … (Tracey Wright-Tawha (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Te Āti Awa), CEO, Ngā Kete Mātauranga Pounamu Charitable Trust, December 2020)
We trained all their staff when we went around. So, their own nurses, and their own healthcare assistants … So, if and when they wanted to open their own mobile pop-up station, that they could do it straight away. (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
3.3. Collectivising for a Common Kaupapa
Everybody put in some pūtea [money]. We got a building from the council, and we stood up a kai distribution hub again. And we used our own money and some of our own networks to get the kai that was required over that period of time. (Materoa Mar (Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Whātua, Ngāpuhi), Upoko Whakarae: Te Tihi o Ruahine Whānau Ora Alliance, October 2021)
During lockdown we were told to do something, and we never got funded until a couple of months later. It was based on high trust because you had to get things done straight away. We would be calling into the Ministry, just to touch base in relation to what we’re doing, and they’d be screaming down the phone saying, “Hurry up and get it done, we’ll sort it out later”. Which was a bit of a risk for us because no contract was signed. But we knew it had to be done. (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
If we look at whānau during this recent lockdown—the number of our whānau that are 70+ but are isolated. Being able to reach into those whānau because we’ve been able to join up our conversations to know, actually this person’s there. There’s a greater visibility around health, social, welfare. It’s being driven through iwi collaboration. (Hayden Wano (Taranaki, Te Āti Awa, Ngāti Tama, Ngāti Awa), CE, Tui Ora, September 2021)
We think we know our community quite well, but we were hearing from people that we’d never seen before … Some of them, they were just ringing up to say, “I’m from Bluff and I saw this elderly guy trying to carry his shopping from the Four Square” and I said, “Did you watch him go to his address?” And they said, “Yeah …“ … So, we would just go down and take supplies and knock and say, “You all right koro [affectionate term of address to an elderly male]? Can we get it for you next time around?” (Tracey Wright-Tawha (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Te Āti Awa), CEO, Ngā Kete Mātauranga Pounamu Charitable Trust, December 2020)
… within four or five days we were collectively talking to one another. Who’s doing what, when, how, why? … The Police were working with you. Medical staff were working with you. Civil Defence were working with you. Foodbanks were ringing … it was great for redefining relationships. (Tracey Wright-Tawha (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Te Āti Awa), CEO, Ngā Kete Mātauranga Pounamu Charitable Trust, December 2020)
On the roadblocks, it had the iwi groups, you had the DHB groups, and we had the Police and everybody else. And so, what was really important about that was the iwi had a big say in what happened …(Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
Every day at two o’clock we would have a Zoom with iwi Māori leaders across the rohe … the Māori staff who were sort of in senior roles inside of agencies. So, that worked very well for bringing together the resources that we needed for the connectivity; for what it was that we were aspiring to do, and how can we work together to make that happen. (Materoa Mar (Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Whātua, Ngāpuhi), Upoko Whakarae: Te Tihi o Ruahine Whānau Ora Alliance, October 2021)
3.4. Culturally-Embedded Indigenous Responses
In fact, those who actually reframe the whole COVID kaupapa (issue) in terms of our tikanga and our whakapapa … those are the ones that are having the greatest success … (Helmut Modlik (Ngāti Toa Rangatira), CEO, Te Rūnanga o Toa Rangatira, September 2021)
Running competitions … you know, hand-sanitising or washing your hands. Just trying to lighten some of that mood, but also reminding ourselves about what are the things that will protect our whakapapa.(Materoa Mar (Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Whātua, Ngāpuhi), Upoko Whakarae: Te Tihi o Ruahine Whānau Ora Alliance, October 2021)
The thing that you’re selling is trust. That’s what people need. You’re brokering trust, and you’re brokering those relationships and you’re brokering engagement. That’s the thing that you’ve got to secure first, and then you can talk about whatever services they need after that … (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
We were whānau-orientated. We knew our maraes [sic]. We knew our systems … there was a total connect with our whānau and the marae and things like that. We can do that again. (Jean Te Huia (Ngāti Kahungunu), CEO/Founder, Kahungunu Health Services, August 2021)
Sometimes just, you know, a Māori kaimahi rocking up into their Pākehā [Caucasian] window, saying, “You all good? You need some kai? You need some prescriptions? How’s everything at home?” Some of them found it quite intrusive, it be like, “This is our business!” Whereas, all the Māori whānau, they rocked up, and as soon as they saw us, just opened the boot straight away, and all the boxes got piled in. Such a different understanding of our manaakitanga eh. (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
… the kaimahi didn’t go home because they’re not gonna take COVID back to their families … they didn’t wanna put their whānau at risk … Some of them were actually away from home for more than two weeks in a row …(Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
Our Māori nurses, primary healthcare … the freedom to be able to be in charge of their own domain … they’re out there doing TikTok; people are delivering them food; and they’re just getting through the numbers …(Kerri Nuku (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāi Tai), Kaiwhakahaere, New Zealand Nurses Organisation, September 2021)
… we had people from all around the country who had whakapapa to each of those townships, who had a health background, all emailing us saying, “Hey, I want to be a part of this, and I want to be on that mobile unit, and help”. We had no shortage of people coming from around the country … be able to go back and do something for their own township. (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
3.5. Growing Confidence and Capacity
There is a lot of work that’s been done around sovereignty and sharing information and that’s given an appetite for seeing data being critical to the way that iwi think and move … There’s a thirst for it, to understand more. That’s just been there before, but never in such a joined-up way.(Hayden Wano (Taranaki, Te Āti Awa, Ngāti Tama, Ngāti Awa), CE, Tui Ora, September 2021)
Don’t be restricted by your organisation or your contract … If we’re kaupapa driven, figure out how it can happen. I found it quite an exciting time because those are some of the things that I think are fundamental to how I would like to practice. (Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
We made a documentary called ‘Ka Puta Ka Ora’. It’s available on Māori TV On Demand and that gives a really good overview of the iwi Māori network and what we experienced, what whānau experienced, there’s some whānau who talk on there. And then, what were the things we learnt and what does that look like going forward? (Materoa Mar (Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Whātua, Ngāpuhi), Upoko Whakarae: Te Tihi o Ruahine Whānau Ora Alliance, October 2021)
Trying to even to get to a hui to have those conversations with them [iwi] before were near on difficult, because they thought of you as those ‘health people’. Now, they understand. I think there’s a much better synergy. (Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
… we had created this new expectation around engagement … from a kind of mobile rural outreach point of view because that’s just the way they [whānau] want it. They don’t want to go to their doctor, for whatever reason, or their GP [General Practitioner] … we’re meeting that expectations [sic] of our whānau … all our whānau, who had never seen a doctor ever before, were coming out … (Dr Chris Tooley (Ngāti Kahungunu), CE, Te Puna Ora o Mataatua, March 2021)
We want to be really forward-thinking and enabling, so people have lots of different ways that they can actually access service. I’m amazed at how many people just like being able to phone-in or Zoom-in, talk to their GP. It only takes 10–15 min, and then they can have their medication sent to them. They don’t have to come and get it. We make it easy. (Tracey Wright-Tawha (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Te Āti Awa), CEO, Ngā Kete Mātauranga Pounamu Charitable Trust, December 2020)
3.6. The Return to ‘Business as Usual’
… in the interim, for a very short time, they [government] became that back-office support. Until they were brought up to speed, and then they took the control back.(Heather Skipworth (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Rangitihi, Ngāti Ruanui, Tūwharetoa), CEO IronMāori, September 2021)
What developed between this organisation, iwi down here, was almost like a trust relationship with the Crown agencies. But within three weeks of the lockdown being lifted, all I’m hearing all over the country, “They’re going right back to the old way”. All the trust stuff has disappeared out the door. (Rakatira (Kāi Tahu), March 2021)
Recovery post-COVID is a completely different story, where we appear to have gone back into same old, same old … we get invited to the table, but we get hōhā [annoyed] at the table, and we withdraw ourselves … it’s two different worlds … they’re pulling all the power back; they’re pulling it bit by bit.(Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
What we also noticed was that the Crown sort of started behaving like they could do the job that we had done previously … they didn’t peel away and say, “Here, get this resource out the door because you have got that covered”. They suddenly wanted to become us. (Materoa Mar (Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Whātua, Ngāpuhi), Upoko Whakarae: Te Tihi o Ruahine Whānau Ora Alliance, October 2021)
So, after the last lockdown, how the Prime Minister made the statement how amazingly iwi had stepped up and what an amazing job. When I got asked about it, I said, “Look, we hear that comment after every bloody disaster, but three months after that it’s completely forgotten”. And the next disaster, “Look how well iwi have stepped up”. We get sick of hearing that crap. (Rakatira (Kāi Tahu), March 2021)
When we came down to Level One, all of a sudden, “Oh, we’re vigilantes” … What they want to do is hide the racism stuff; is hide their inefficiencies and try and make this a Māori problem … (Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
A lot of our people are deeply negative around the vaccine, and they run for disinformation really, really quickly … They may not be rabid anti-vaxxers, but they’re deeply concerned by the wider agenda of the New Zealand government, and they ought to be. (Simon Royal (Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Whanaunga), CEO, National Hauora Coalition, March 2021)
They’d fallen down so many bloody conspiracy rabbit holes that by the time the government started their campaign it was slow … Which meant all the anti-vax and all the conspiracy theories got in there. (Emeritus Professor Khyla Russell (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Rapuwai), Rakatira; Dr Justine Camp (Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha, Rapuwai), Associate Dean (Māori), Otago Medical School, University of Otago, May 2021)
4. Discussion
4.1. Culturally-Embedded Responses
4.2. Collectivising for Action
4.3. Distributive Networks
5. Conclusions: Activating Mana Motuhake
[The] response to COVID was one distinct moment in time. And that’s when we flourished. (Rōpū Kaitiaki Wānanga, November 2020)
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Glossary
Aotearoa | New Zealand |
District Health Board | 20 District Health Boards were responsible for providing or funding the provision of health services in their district. In 2022, DHBs were disestablished, and their functions merged into Te Whatu Ora, which now leads the day-to-day running of the health system for the whole of Aotearoa. |
Hapori Māori | Māori community/communities |
Hapū | Division of wider Māori community determined by genealogical descent; commonly regarded as a sub-‘tribe/s’, clan/s or kinship group/s comprising one or more extended whānau; primary political unit in traditional Māori society |
Hauora | Health, wellbeing |
Hauora Māori | Māori health and wellbeing |
Hōhā | Annoyed, exasperated |
Iwi | Largest groupings of Māori community determined by genealogical descent and associated with a distinct territory; commonly regarded as a ‘tribe/s’ comprising a number of hapū |
Kai | Food |
Kaimahi | Worker/s |
Kaitiakitanga | Guardianship, stewardship |
Kanohi ki te kanohi | Face-to-face |
Karakia | Traditional ‘prayer/s’, incantation/s, ritual chant/s, blessing/s |
Kaumātua | Respected Elder/s—male and female |
Kaupapa Māori | Māori approach, Māori topic, Māori customary practice, Māori agenda, Māori principles, Māori ideology—a philosophical doctrine, incorporating the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and values of Māori society |
Kaupapa | Cause/s, event/s, topic/s, issue/s |
Koro | Term of address to elderly male/s |
Koroua | Elderly male/s |
Kuia | Elderly female/s |
Mana | A person, place or object’s prestige, authority, control, power, influence, status, spiritual power, charisma |
Mana Māori motuhake | An overarching term for the distinct mana of Māori |
Mana Motuhake | Autonomy, self-determination, independence, sovereignty, authority and control over one’s own destiny |
Manaakitanga | Supportive hospitality, kindness; the process of showing respect, generosity and care for others |
Māori | Indigenous people of Aotearoa |
Marae | Complex of buildings on iwi land that includes a whare tipuna (‘tribal’ meeting house) |
Mātauranga | Knowledge, wisdom, understanding, skill |
Mātauranga Māori | The body of knowledge originating from Māori ancestors, including the Māori worldview and perspectives, Māori creativity and cultural practices |
Oranga | Wellbeing, health |
Pākehā | European, Caucasian |
Pūtea | Fund/s, sum/s of money |
Rohe | District/s, region/s |
Rōpū Kaitiaki | Group of leaders guiding the research |
Rōpū Māori | Māori organisation/s, provider/s, group/s |
Taiohi | Youth/young person |
Te Ao Māori | The Māori world |
Te Puni Kōkiri | Ministry of Māori Development—the principal policy advisor on Māori wellbeing and development for the government of Aotearoa |
Te Reo Māori | The Māori language |
Tikanga | Correct procedure, custom, lore, method, manner, practice, protocol |
Waitangi Tribunal | Established in 1975 as a standing commission of inquiry to make recommendations on claims brought by Māori relating to legislation, policies, actions, or omissions of the Crown that are alleged to breach the promises made in Te Tiriti o Waitangi—the agreement signed in 1840 between representatives of the British Crown and Māori chiefs |
Wānanga | Group discussion/s; forum/s; deliberation/s |
Whaea | Term of address to elderly female/s |
Whakapapa | Genealogy, ancestry, origin |
Whānau | Extended family/families |
Whānau Ora services | Community-based services specifically delivering a culturally based, whānau-centred approach to wellbeing which focuses on whānau as a whole, as the decision-makers who determine their goals and aspirations. Includes specialist staff who act as navigators and advocates for whānau |
Whanaungatanga | Relationship/s, kinship/s, sense of family connection |
Zui | Colloquial term combining ‘Zoom’ video calls and ‘hui’ (meetings) |
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Russell, L.; Levy, M.; Barnao, E.; Parore, N.; Smiler, K.; Boulton, A. Enacting Mana Māori Motuhake during COVID-19 in Aotearoa (New Zealand): “We Weren’t Waiting to Be Told What to Do”. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 5581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20085581
Russell L, Levy M, Barnao E, Parore N, Smiler K, Boulton A. Enacting Mana Māori Motuhake during COVID-19 in Aotearoa (New Zealand): “We Weren’t Waiting to Be Told What to Do”. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(8):5581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20085581
Chicago/Turabian StyleRussell, Lynne, Michelle Levy, Elizabeth Barnao, Nora Parore, Kirsten Smiler, and Amohia Boulton. 2023. "Enacting Mana Māori Motuhake during COVID-19 in Aotearoa (New Zealand): “We Weren’t Waiting to Be Told What to Do”" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 8: 5581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20085581
APA StyleRussell, L., Levy, M., Barnao, E., Parore, N., Smiler, K., & Boulton, A. (2023). Enacting Mana Māori Motuhake during COVID-19 in Aotearoa (New Zealand): “We Weren’t Waiting to Be Told What to Do”. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(8), 5581. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20085581