Unprecedented Times: Māori Experiences of Pandemics Past in the Time of COVID-19

Nicolas Jones, Marcos Mortensen Steagall
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Abstract

Covid-19’s (mate korona) spread across the world and the implementation of wide sweeping government instigated public health measures saw a growing notion globally that we are living in “unprecidented times”. This notion was also expressed in Aotearoa New Zealand with the arrival of Covid-19 to Aotearoa New Zealand shores in early 2020. While Covid-19 presents a new epidemiological threat, examination of Aotearoa’s historical twentith century pandemics and sporadic outbreaks of infectious diseases show similar challanges to tikanga Māori (Māori protocols, customs, and behavioural guidelines) as COVID-19 presents today. This paper contextualises Māori experiences of epidemics and pandemics of the past and explores the historical and contemporary assaults on Māori customs during times of disease. Drawing on archival research, contemporary sources, and interviews with kaumātua (Māori elders) conducted during Aotearoa’s first national lockdown in 2020, this study scrutinises both historical and contemporary New Zealand Governmental responses and media attitudes towards tangihanga (funarary rites) and hongi (pressing of the noses) during pandemics and epidemics. Alongside examining the cultural significance and importance of tangihanga and hongi to Māori, this study shows that far from being “unprecedented times”, many of the same challenges to these practices Māori have faced during past pandemics and epidemics have remerged during COVID-19. Through this examination, this study highlights that a pattern exists where tikanga Māori practices come under public and political scrutiny and attack during pandemics and infectious disease outbreaks. Kaumātua are bastions of tikanga and collective memory of pandemics and other crises of the past and have integrated tikanga based disease mitigation measures into their intergenerational collective memory corpus. This paper highlights both the importance of these tikanga practices to kaumātua, and how tikanga informed kaumātua approaches to COVID-19 public health measure restrictions and their personal hauora (health). By undertaking this study, this paper draws particular attention to tikanga as an imperative aspect of Māori identity that must be understood by health officials, and the continual importance of the tikanga Māori concept of tapu (restricted, set apart, sacred) in mitigating disease and maintaining Māori hauora (health).
前所未有的时代:Māori COVID-19时期过去大流行的经验
新冠肺炎疫情在全球蔓延,政府发起的全面公共卫生措施的实施,让全球越来越多的人意识到,我们生活在一个“前所未有的时代”。随着新冠病毒于2020年初抵达新西兰奥特罗阿海岸,这一想法也在奥特罗阿得到了体现。虽然2019冠状病毒病构成了新的流行病学威胁,但对20世纪奥特阿瓦历史上的大流行和零星传染病暴发的考察表明,tikanga Māori (Māori协议、习俗和行为准则)面临的挑战与今天的2019冠状病毒病类似。本文将Māori流行病和过去流行病的经历置于背景中,并探讨了在疾病时期对Māori习俗的历史和当代攻击。本研究利用档案研究、当代资料以及在2020年奥特亚罗阿第一次全国封锁期间对kaumātua (Māori长者)进行的采访,仔细研究了历史和当代新西兰政府在流行病和流行病期间对tangihanga(葬礼仪式)和hongi(压鼻子)的反应和媒体态度。除了考察tangihanga和hongi对Māori的文化意义和重要性外,这项研究还表明,这些习俗所面临的许多挑战远不是“前所未有的时代”Māori在过去的大流行期间面临过,而疫情在COVID-19期间再次出现。通过这一审查,本研究突出表明,在大流行病和传染病爆发期间,tikanga Māori做法受到公众和政治的审查和攻击,这是一种模式。Kaumātua是对流行病和过去其他危机的tikanga和集体记忆的堡垒,并将以tikanga为基础的疾病缓解措施纳入其代际集体记忆语料库。本文强调了这些tikanga做法对kaumātua的重要性,以及tikanga如何为kaumātua提供COVID-19公共卫生措施限制及其个人健康(健康)的方法。通过进行这项研究,本文特别注意到tikanga作为Māori身份的一个重要方面,必须被卫生官员理解,以及tikanga Māori概念在减轻疾病和维持Māori hauora(健康)方面的持续重要性(tapu,受限制的,分开的,神圣的)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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