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Fifty years ago, the Polynesian Panthers Party led a revolution against what it argued was the rampant racism of 1970s Aotearoa. Dr Melani Anae explores its impact.
Fifty years ago, the Polynesian Panthers Party led a revolution against what it argued was the rampant racism of 1970s Aotearoa.
Dr Melani Anae explores the impact of the Panthers movement on herself and New Zealand society.
Listen to the talk
Dr Melani Anae is a senior lecturer in Pacific Studies at the University of Auckland. This talk was delivered on 2 August 2022 at the university's Raising the Bar event.
Educate to liberate!
The Polynesian Panthers movement aimed to expose the oppression and persecution of Pacific people which was accepted by mainstream New Zealand. Only a few years after the group's founding, the period of the Dawn Raids would bring into sharpest relief the way the country's predominantly palagi power structures treated its Pacific populations.
In 2021, the government issued a formal apology for this dark period in New Zealand history, which had seen police entering homes and demanding to see permits, visas, or passports - anything that proved a person's right to be in the country. This happened almost exclusively to Pacific Islanders, even though most overstayers in this era were from Europe or North America.
In this very personal talk, Dr Melani Anae explores how the movement's radical position permeated her work as an academic, teacher and mentor.
Throughout her career, Dr Anae has been committed to confronting racism through education.
Since the 1970s, a highly politicised generation of Pacific leaders have become politicians, university graduates, doctors, lawyers, All Blacks, academics, writers, theologians, musicians and entertainers.
As a Pacific scholar, Melani has played a significant role in establishing what Pacific scholarship and research should be, particularly in the context of current global challenges such as the Covid-19 pandemic, climate change and the modern and more subtle prejudice that continues today.
She is determined that the Panthers' story and legacy be passed on to the next generation so history is not repeated.
Related:
Polynesian Panthers mark 50 years of activism (News)
Polynesian Panther Party of Aotearoa - 50 years on (Voices)
Dr Melani Anae on Saturday Morning (2015)
https://youtu.be/fueGYb822xQ
Dr Melani Anae…
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
Fifty years ago, the Polynesian Panthers Party led a revolution against what it argued was the rampant racism of 1970s Aotearoa. Dr Melani Anae explores its impact.
Fifty years ago, the Polynesian Panthers Party led a revolution against what it argued was the rampant racism of 1970s Aotearoa.
Dr Melani Anae explores the impact of the Panthers movement on herself and New Zealand society.
Listen to the talk
Dr Melani Anae is a senior lecturer in Pacific Studies at the University of Auckland. This talk was delivered on 2 August 2022 at the university's Raising the Bar event.
Educate to liberate!
The Polynesian Panthers movement aimed to expose the oppression and persecution of Pacific people which was accepted by mainstream New Zealand. Only a few years after the group's founding, the period of the Dawn Raids would bring into sharpest relief the way the country's predominantly palagi power structures treated its Pacific populations.
In 2021, the government issued a formal apology for this dark period in New Zealand history, which had seen police entering homes and demanding to see permits, visas, or passports - anything that proved a person's right to be in the country. This happened almost exclusively to Pacific Islanders, even though most overstayers in this era were from Europe or North America.
In this very personal talk, Dr Melani Anae explores how the movement's radical position permeated her work as an academic, teacher and mentor.
Throughout her career, Dr Anae has been committed to confronting racism through education.
Since the 1970s, a highly politicised generation of Pacific leaders have become politicians, university graduates, doctors, lawyers, All Blacks, academics, writers, theologians, musicians and entertainers.
As a Pacific scholar, Melani has played a significant role in establishing what Pacific scholarship and research should be, particularly in the context of current global challenges such as the Covid-19 pandemic, climate change and the modern and more subtle prejudice that continues today.
She is determined that the Panthers' story and legacy be passed on to the next generation so history is not repeated.
Related:
Polynesian Panthers mark 50 years of activism (News)
Polynesian Panther Party of Aotearoa - 50 years on (Voices)
Dr Melani Anae on Saturday Morning (2015)
https://youtu.be/fueGYb822xQ
Dr Melani Anae…
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
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