<%@ Language = VBscript %> <% response.buffer = true %> <% session("cookietest") = "success" DSN = "the-friend" set conn = server.createobject("ADODB.Connection") Conn.Open DSN SQL = "SELECT TOP 1 * FROM articles INNER JOIN pdfs ON articles.articledate = pdfs.pdfdate WHERE category = 1 ORDER BY articledate DESC" set entries = conn.execute(SQL) articledate = entries("articledate") %> the Friend - Independent Quaker journalism since 1843

August 05, 2008

Quakers in New Zealand - how they misjudged local feeling

We have heard more of the Quaker presence in New Zealand in the mid-nineteenth century (Eye 11 July). It is a tragic tale of conflict with the original population around Nelson in which a young Quaker was killed. Meg Hill of Devon Area Meeting has the story.
'John Sylvanus Cotterell was a twenty-two-year-old surveyor from a Bristol Quaker family of long standing. He went to Sidcot School as did many of his relatives. Their family journals The Swallow have recently been given to Sidcot. I think that some of his letters home from New Zealand are reproduced in them.
'New Zealand was being opened up to white settlement in 1842 when Cotterell arrived in Nelson, on South Island. People had been promised farming land before they left Britain but little had been surveyed and allocated, so there was some urgency to proceed. Cotterell and his team explored the territory south of Nelson, and "discovered" the Tophouse Pass into the Wairau valley, and Lake Roto-Iti. They were probably already well known to the Maori inhabitants!
'As the surveying progressed in the Wairau, the Maori calmly pulled up the survey pegs each night in peaceful protest at what they foresaw would be the annexation by the whites of their tribal lands (justified by the government because the land was not being cultivated). They warned the survey team of the violent consequences of continuing the work. Finally, they burnt an empty temporary shelter used by the surveyors. The local magistrate, H A Thompson, arrived at the scene and attempted to arrest the Maori chief, Te Rauparaha, who had come to deal with the problem.
'Things got out of hand and firing began, probably by the men brought out by Thompson. A Maori woman was killed and then the slaughter began. Eventually, twenty-two people died, including Cotterell who, unarmed, seems to have tried to stop what was happening. Some were later tomahawked in retribution (utu) for the woman's death - she was a chief's wife.
'It seems strange that Cotterell was so unaware of the Maori's feelings. He had gone to New Zealand intending to learn the language and with a concern for the spiritual life of the Maori. He was interested in their religious observance, noting that "It is a matter of humiliation that these poor savages evince much more of Christianity by their meetings and lives than their Christian visitors".
'What he did not take account of was his observation that "the Maori are powerful in argument, quick in perception, obstinate in maintenance of supposed rights..."
'After his death, his little house in Nelson eventually became the first Friends Meeting House in New Zealand. It is now the site of "Quaker Acre".
'As an afterword, in the 1970s, a Cotterell descendant married Niwa, a descendant of the chief, Te Rauparaha. She is a lawyer specialising in Maori land rights.'

Labels: , ,

July 08, 2008

Downtown solitude

A little bit of Quaker history has surfaced in a busy part of Nelson, New Zealand. A Friend has sent some local newspaper clippings of a story which started way back when Europeans settled in Nelson in the mid-nineteenth century. There were Quakers among them who together bought an acre in the new settlement from the New Zealand Company – quickly nicknamed the 'Quaker acre' by locals.

The Friends made headway, becoming shopkeepers and surveyors, later building their own Meeting house on the Quaker acre, said to be the first in New Zealand.

But all was not plain sailing for these early pioneers. As we know from more recent history, settlement brings conflict with native populations and the Quakers were concerned with Maori welfare, speaking out about harsh treatment of tangata whenua (indigenous people of the place or land). And in what is described as a Maori affray, Quaker surveyor John Cotterell stuck to his pacifist principles and was killed on surrender after refusing to fight.

Now the city has opened its first 'quiet garden' on the site of the Quaker acre. With two years of preparation by Grace Sutherland of Nelson Meeting a near derelict site in the city centre has been transformed into a simple space with plain benches. Close by are the graves of Samuel and Martha Strong, Quakers who died in the 1800s. Their graves constituted a 'cemetery' – the smallest in the city –and this was why the piece of land was never developed.

The Quakers and the city council got together to give the Nelsonians a place of solitude right in the middle of one of their noisier intersections. We trust our Friend there will take full advantage of this oasis.

Labels: , ,

q-eye from The Friend

The collaborative online diary of The Friend: independent Quaker journalism from the UK since 1843. Currently in test stage, featuring items from the magazine and other bloggable snippets

Eye guide


Previous Posts

A Song of Jean

Haiku trail

A dream or a complaint?

Quakers in New Zealand - how they misjudged local ...

Things you may have missed

Fred Rowntree's original drawings

Dr Hadwen, the protector of mice

Attention history buffs and archivists

Songs of Praise seeks older activists

Well kitted out Suggest a link

Enter your Email to subscribe to free Eye newsletter (separate from Friend subscriptions)


Powered by FeedBlitz

Archives

Powered by Blogger

Independent Quaker journalism since 1843