Conceptualizing Indigenous Human–Animal Relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand: An Ethical Perspective
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Rationale for Research Approach
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Interview Structure
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Positioning the Researcher
3. Results
3.1. Kaitiakitanga and the Natural State of Things
“Wearing my kaitiaki [guardian] hat looking at the blue penguin I use them as an indicator species because they don’t travel too far. They indicate to me how healthy the marine environment is.”
“We don’t have rabbits, goats, pigs, stoats, ferrets. We don’t have any of the mustelid family. They are killing machines.”
“The natural life should not be interfered with too much; sometimes we cause more trouble than we mean to… What would happen if we weren’t there? If you remove us from the equation, they usually can look after themselves. It is whoever is the fittest. When there are three bright orange beaks coming out of the nest, the parents just aim for the brightest color that they can put the food into, and those birds will trample over each other to get to the top. It is the strongest one that will survive, and that is what makes the next generation strong because only the strong survive. It is a hard lesson for some people to learn.”
“If a bird falls out of the nest and a weka [Weka—Gallirallus australis, a flightless bird endemic to New Zealand] comes along and takes off with it, it’s part of the natural world; it’s our Serengeti”.
“We are doing all this work to protect our native species. Long term, we will see cats being an inside pet. You will have to be a registered breeder to be able to move them and that process will be so arduous that there aren’t many breeders, and we would see the population drop to about 5% over about ten years.”
“I think it is as simple as I like eating them, and it is no different than a European farmer for thousands of years ensuring that sheep are around”.
“Everybody wants to see the wildlife in this pristine environment. It is unique and people just love to see the freedom. We are the visitors there. The wildlife and the forest are paramount, and we are just privileged to live in that environment.”
“[I want] for them to tell the story of success, hand those stories down. That is how we work, that is how I work. Hand those stories down. They are beautiful stories for our mokopuna’s [grandchild or grandchildren]. I grew up with my grandparents. […] My mum would say to me today it is not about you; it is about the mokopuna. It is about us doing our best for our mokopuna that we can.”
“I think the humans will die off before the animals do. We have to ensure that our ethos that comes from ourselves as Kai Tāhu is to leave the whenua [the land] in a better condition than when the responsibility was passed to us. That includes everything that is living upon it.”
3.2. The Mauri of Things
“It is a lifeforce, an essence of life. Another way of thinking is the spirit in te ao Māori is the wairua, and that is something beyond death and can interact with the afterlife, but the mauri is something that is “life”, and if it dies, it dies.”
“When I think of Ki uta ki tai which is mountains to the sea, that really is about mauri because you have that rain that comes onto the mountains, eventually coming down the rivers, going out into the ocean and then going back up onto the mountains. It is a closed circle, and you are impacting on that mauri by discharging things into that environment or, when you are harvesting things, killing more and leaving that lying in the ground and contaminating the ground or contaminating the waters.”
“If we have enough mauri within ourselves to come to those tables, then that will then come back to protecting our wildlife.”
“I have stood up in Environment Court and talked on behalf of the trees, because the trees aren’t considered an entity…”
“This has happened only in the last two decades through people doing it, standing up and saying ‘I put this submission on behalf of the trees that are going to be affected by the activity involved’…”
3.3. Spiritual Connections and Whakapapa
3.3.1. The Land
“Because it is a part of who we are, and it is really important for us as Māori to keep connecting to the land.”
“She was brought up in that lighthouse, and her whenua [placenta—also used to refer to the land or domain] is buried underground. My grandmother’s whenua was buried underground.”
“We understand in that whakapapa […] the land and the animals are our ancestors, and, in that relationship, we are subservient to the land and the animals.”
3.3.2. The Animals
“We have been cut off from our land and our taonga [treasured] species for a long time.”
“I believe that the albatross and the titi and the penguins, so ko tangata toroa, ko tangata titi, ko tangata kororā are waiting for us to come back home, come back to here [to the land] and look after them properly.”
“Yes, I do think so. One of the things I have been noticing is that they need more protection and advocacy space. The protection of their fishing grounds, the protection of their environment in things like the Port Otago Mana Whenua consultation group and things like that. If we have enough mauri within ourselves to come to those tables, then that will then come back to protecting our wildlife.”
4. Discussion
4.1. The Natural World
4.1.1. Kaitiakitanga
4.1.2. The Natural Environment
4.2. The Spiritual World
4.2.1. Connections between Māori and Animals
4.2.2. The Spiritual Health of Animals
4.2.3. Mauri
5. Conclusions
5.1. Implications
5.1.1. Implications for Law and Policy
5.1.2. Implications for Models of Animal Welfare
5.1.3. Ethical Implications
5.2. Final Thoughts
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Woodhouse, J.; Carr, A.; Liebergreen, N.; Anderson, L.; Beausoleil, N.J.; Zobel, G.; King, M. Conceptualizing Indigenous Human–Animal Relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand: An Ethical Perspective. Animals 2021, 11, 2899. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11102899
Woodhouse J, Carr A, Liebergreen N, Anderson L, Beausoleil NJ, Zobel G, King M. Conceptualizing Indigenous Human–Animal Relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand: An Ethical Perspective. Animals. 2021; 11(10):2899. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11102899
Chicago/Turabian StyleWoodhouse, Jordan, Anna Carr, Nicola Liebergreen, Lynley Anderson, Ngaio J. Beausoleil, Gosia Zobel, and Mike King. 2021. "Conceptualizing Indigenous Human–Animal Relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand: An Ethical Perspective" Animals 11, no. 10: 2899. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11102899
APA StyleWoodhouse, J., Carr, A., Liebergreen, N., Anderson, L., Beausoleil, N. J., Zobel, G., & King, M. (2021). Conceptualizing Indigenous Human–Animal Relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand: An Ethical Perspective. Animals, 11(10), 2899. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11102899