As New Zealand faces a new health crisis, memories and stories of pandemics and epidemics of the past remain vivid in the minds of many. Julia Gabel explores the lessons from history - especially how past mistakes have affected M膩ori.听
The world has faced pandemics and epidemics for thousands of years - from the Antonine Plague in the Roman Empire, the Black Death of the 14th century, the 1918 "Spanish flu", with an estimated 50 million deaths, to the Covid-19 global pandemic today.听
When historian Geoffrey Rice unveiled a memorial for the 1918 influenza pandemic with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in November 2019 in Wellington, he used his speech to warn of the lessons that could be learned from that period a century ago.听
"The big lesson of 1918 was that the government back then had no pandemic plan, it was very complacent, and adopted a 'let's wait and see' policy and it was disastrous," he said.听
"I said ... the big lesson for you politicians if we get another pandemic you've got to move very fast on the best advice, you've got to be decisive and act quickly."听
Several months after that unveiling, New Zealand would report the first Covid-19 case, "alert levels" would be introduced and heavy restrictions placed on the border.听
Chairman of the Maniapoto M膩ori Trust Board, Keith Ikin, said in the first Covid-19 outbreak, they听mobilised听quickly and set up call听centres听to stay connected with their people while听organising听care packages.听
Rice called the events of the 1918 flu pandemic New Zealand's worst public health disaster.听
"Nothing else has killed so many New Zealanders in such a small space of time, not even the battles of the First World War."听
It would claim around 9000 New Zealand lives in the space of two months and M膩ori suffered greatly with about 2500 deaths.听
In a NZ History article, historian Elizabeth Cox said M膩ori communities were devastated in 1918 and also faced "prejudice at the time, with M膩ori somehow blamed for the pandemic".听
She wrote: "While many听P膩keh膩听communities banded together, they sometimes left听neighbouring听hap奴听and marae to fend for themselves."听
Examples of great M膩ori bravery in the face of the 1918 pandemic emerged, Cox wrote, including the story of Marion (Mereana) Hattaway who led the battle against the disease in听Te听Kuiti at听Te听Tokanganui-a-noho听Marae.听
Health research analyst Dr Rawiri听Taonui听said despite being heavily impacted with death rates nine times higher than听P膩keh膩, M膩ori faced differential treatment.听
"There was a lot of racism around the flu pandemic. They had separate hospitals, but a lot of those hospitals were town halls. Not in all cases, but generally听P膩keh膩听sites had doctors and nurses, and M膩ori sites were lucky if they had nurses."听
In his book Black Flu 1918, Rice said this strain of the virus was unusual as 鈥 along with elderly and infants 鈥 it killed healthy adults in the prime of their life, especially between 20 and 45.听
Rice said little was known about viruses in those days, with aspirin used to keep temperatures down - and it wasn't until the invention of the electron microscope in the 1930s that scientists were able to identify viruses - while "good nursing" and "enlightened leadership" were some of the only remedies in 1918.听
The flu spread when the SS听Talune听ship sailed from Auckland to mainly Fiji and Western Polynesia 鈥 with Western Samoa, as it was known then, the worst-hit country in the world with an estimated 22 per cent of the population, or 8500 people dying.听
Minister for Pacific Peoples听Aupito听William Sio said as infected people got off the steamship in Apia, the disease spread like wildfire and the township was devastated.听
"I heard stories get passed on by word of mouth how in the evening you'd have a conversation, and all would be well, and in the morning, people would've died; wouldn't wake up. That was how devastating it was."听
It wasn't only the significant loss of life that was devastating - but also the loss of family oral histories, cultural practices and indigenous knowledge that were usually passed on to the next generation by word of mouth, Sio said.听
"You had young children who had not yet听memorised听their genealogies, you had not yet听memorised听land boundaries, who had not yet听memorised听a lot of other cultural practices."听
Minister for Pacific Peoples听Aupito听William Sio says Western Samoa, as it was known then, was the worst-hit country in the world by the 1918 influenza pandemic. Photo / Jason Oxenham.听
Every family, every village would have a healer - with extensive knowledge of the environment and what plants could be used to treat ailments; a person who knew how to build traditional houses and a person who could build canoes, Sio said.听
"It's not just cutting up the wood. It's knowing what wood. It's knowing when you cut that tree down you've got to replace it with another. It's the making of tapa, how to prepare the bark. It's knowing which leaves to use for the weaving of fine mats. All of this knowledge is kept by individuals who received that knowledge from those who went before. When you have those adults suddenly die on you, that ends it.听
"You think, in eight weeks, these adults all died. As you grow up, you don't know even know what to ask. You don't even know what you've lost."听
A sign of resilience, Sio said in a speech, was the country's听remobilisation听of the Mau movement in 1962 that led Samoa to become the first听colonised听country in the Pacific to regain its independence.听
"This is one of many examples of our Pacific histories that demonstrate dedication and perseverance in the face of adversity by our ancestors."听
Outside of the 1918 pandemic, other outbreaks between the 1860s and 1900, including whooping cough, typhoid, scarlet fever, measles, diphtheria and influenza, had claimed thousands of lives.听
In 1913, a smallpox infection was brought to New Zealand by a Mormon missionary from Vancouver, Richard Shumway, who visited a gathering in Auckland attended by M膩ori from around the country.听
The disease quickly spread around the northern North Island and by the end of the year, had claimed 55 lives, all of them M膩ori.听
Where M膩ori became ill, the public health department erected a yellow flag over their听k膩inga听- barring them from travelling unless they had a certificate showing they had been听immunised.听
Taonui听says while around 750,000 vaccines were produced 鈥 the majority was distributed to听P膩keh膩听in towns and cities before remaining stock was given to M膩ori.听
"In听Taupiri, [where there was a big outbreak], there were 300 people and they were given 80 vaccines. Places like the Hokianga received none at all."听
M膩ori were banned from entering towns and cities, says听Taonui, with two M膩ori who had walked into Hamilton, from a settlement that was suffering, seeking medical aid and food marched to the boundary and told to go.听
M膩ori had been hit hard,听Taonui听said, in early听colonisation听by such diseases but by the turn of the century had begun to develop immunity to some.听
"But by that time, they had lost so much of their land that were deeply impoverished, living ever-decreasing plots of increasingly听marginalised, poor-quality land. They were immunocompromised because of their poverty."听
Fast forward a century - and another pandemic would reach New Zealand, Covid-19. The Government responded with its tiered alert-level and traffic light systems - that would see the country, and particular regions, move in and out of different degrees of restrictions to contain cases.听
听
听in December 2020 showed M膩ori and Pacific peoples were at higher risk of听hospitalisation听of Covid-19.听
After controlling for age and pre-existing conditions, researchers showed M膩ori were two and a half times more likely to need hospital care than non-M膩ori - while the risk for Pacific people was even greater, at three times higher.听
Iwi-led checkpoints to protect people from the virus were a success with those areas that had them seeing a Covid infection rate of "exactly 50 per cent lower than the infection rate for the rest of the country, per 1000 people",听Taonui听says.听
Ikin said in the latest outbreak, some marae had established food banks, and vaccination and testing sites.听
Reflecting on the impact of the 1918 flu pandemic, Ikin said it had decimated their community.听
"I'm living in our听wh膩nau听land between two small communities, Piopio and Aria, and in both of those communities we had mass graves.听
"Every day there was a听wh膩nau听that lost a听wh膩nau听member. Every day for days and days on end."听
Today national M膩ori vaccination rates are well behind those of the overall rates.听
M膩ori are now getting vaccinated at rates听听鈥 and听Taonui听says M膩ori vaccinations had increased 36 per cent since September 15 but that the initial rollout was slow and lacked听prioritisation听of M膩ori.听
In October the Government听听to accelerate M膩ori vaccination rates, a $120 million fund for M膩ori, iwi, community听organisations听and providers to deliver local vaccination initiatives for听wh膩nau.听
Associate Minister for Health (M膩ori Health)听Peeni听Henare said the recent lift in vaccination rates was the direct result of funding M膩ori providers and of M膩ori leadership efforts at a regional and national level.听
"We need this to continue."听
Ikin said they face challenges around听mobilising听younger cohorts - but since more听rangatahi听had stepped into leadership roles they'd seen new levels of engagement with young people.听
"There is still a challenge in that we have low vaccination rate. M膩ori weren't听prioritised, it was the elderly and we're only a very small proportion of the elderly population in New Zealand, and it was frontline workers. We've only really just been able to engage in the last month or so with a younger cohort.听
"What we think is working is young people themselves taking the leadership rein and driving the key messaging and encouraging each other to get vaccinated."听
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