Tag: Celtic New Zealand

Another month, another Franklin E-Local

Except there isn’t much of note to say about this issue; the only reference to the Celtic New Zealand Thesis is the following ad for the Franklin 2008 Yearbook:

Franklin E-Local 2008 Yearbook ad

It’s a little disturbing just how important Myklejon must think these three articles to be, given that it’s part of the advertising, but otherwise the issue is free of wackiness…

Well, aside from the wackiness of advertising masquerading as journalism. That’s just bog standard wack these days.

Doutré – The Uncensored Review

Martin Doutré’s ‘Uncensored’ article is long, rambling and very difficult to critique. Not because it is filled with interesting claims backed up with good arguments but because it meanders, it conflates and is generally obtuse, ill-thought out and badly written. The first page alone commits several fallacies and fails to make a case for an alternative pre-history of Aotearoa.

Yet, it was published.

Why?

I can’t really speculate as to why Jonathan Eisen, the editor of ‘Uncensored,’ felt that this piece was worth publishing; given what else I’ve read of ‘Uncensored’ I can’t really tell what method they have for deciding what is printable and what is not; it may well be that ‘Uncensored’ is purely a contrarian magazine, designed to publish the material that is normally considered unpublishable.

Yet that seems too clever a motivation; ‘Uncensored’ seems more like the gutter of the gutter press than some clever, post-modern attempt to air alternative views.

Anyway, that is really beside the point; given the largeness of Doutré’s article I cannot, for the love of all that I hold dear, deal with it in one post. So I’ll just do it piecemeal and we can all hope that, eventually, I get to the end of it. In a few months time the next one will be out; by then I might have written a book by way of commentary on the first.

Preamble over.

Doutré starts his article with the assertion that it is common knowledge amongst Maori that when they got here there was a large, pre-established caucasoid population who were known as the Patu-pairehe, the Turehu and the Pakapakeha. He then claims that these people taught the Maori arts and crafts and lived among them until hostilities broke out and the original inhabitants were enslaved. Traces of the Patu-pairehe were still evident in the early twentieth century, known as the Waka-blonds, red-haired, freckled faced ‘Maori.’

What is interesting about Doutré’s ‘historical’ account is how it so easily mixes fact with not just fiction but some weird elaborations.

Stories of the tangata whenua, the people of the land, are told in respect to the arriving of the first (major) migration; when the waka arrived there was a reported established population already living in Aotearoa. Now, we do not know if it was a large population but it is fairly clear that whoever they were, they were of th same people that we now know of as Maori; the oral traditions tell us that the newly arrived Maori could not only communicate with the tangata whenua but that some of them were family members. This suggests that the most plausible explanation for this tangata whenua is that they were the people who not only managed to navigate to Aotearoa but were also able to send home of its location and thus start the process that lead to the major wave of colonisation by their people.

Doutré, however, asserts that this tangata whenua population was caucasoid. He then refers to them by their ‘tribal’ names of the Patu-pairehe, the Turehu and the Pakapakeha. This makes it clear that he is conflating the tangata whenua story with the local myths of what Pakeha might call the fey folk, the fairy peoples of Maori mythology. The Patu-pairehe, the Turehu and the Pakapakeha are the names given to mythological human-like entities. They had pale skin, red hair and red eyes (something Doutré fails to mention). They share the same kind of characteristics as fey folk from other cultures ((I suspect that the appearance of the Patu-pairehe, the Turehu and the Pakapakeha can be explained away as by the rare occurrence of albinos in the Polynesian population. A recent Fortean Times article, dealing with the albino population in Nigeria, made a similar claim; this is something that, if I had more time., I’d like to look into.)). What is more important to note here is that these Patu-pairehe, Turehu and Pakapakeha are treated as being mythological by Maori; the notion that they represent very real hapu or iwi in Aotearoa is European. It is likely that the first Europeans in this country simply took talk of the fey folk as representing talk of real peoples, in that same respect that some people will take talk of the Irish fey folk as referring to some ancient demi-human population.

Anyway.

The claim that this population was then wiped out by the Maori is, at best, hearsay and, at worst, fabrication. ((Doutré may have some ‘documentary’ support, in that there are two south island iwi, the Waitaha and Ngati-Mamoe who have stories associated with them claiming a longer pre-history than the conventional wisdom tells us. However, these alternative histories are hotly disputed even by the iwi themselves.)) Doutré also claims the Patu-pairehe were known as the people of the mist but this seems to be conflating the mythological origin of the people of Tuhoe with the Patu-pairehe, et al. I imagine that Doutré isn’t very conversant with Maori history; his sources are mostly the writings of the early European ‘anthropologists’ and he spends a lot of time trying to justify using these early accounts on some weird naive empiricist notion that the early Pakeha were only interested in reporting the truth rather than being interested in, you know, providing justification for the occupying and colonising of Aotearoa.

But I digress into my race traitorousness.

Doutré claims that the proof of this old and established caucasoid population can be found in the reports of the so-called ‘waka-blonds,’ remembered by some (unnamed and unreferenced) ‘old timers.’ The waka-blonds are/were the red-haired, freckle faced ‘Maori’ ‘known’ to exist in the early twentieth century ((Now, given just how well the Pakeha and the Maori got on (carnally) it’s not surprising that there were a lot of red haired, freckled face Maori. I blame the Irish, personally. I have Irish ancestry and it shows (Irish hair). Certainly, this is a much more plausible rationale for these ‘waka blonds’ than them being the remnants of some much older caucasoid population.)). Reports at the turn of the twentieth century are not useful, however; by that time the Maori and Pakeha populations were intermingled; what you would need to make this claim even slightly suggest his hypothesis is reportage of ‘caucasoid’ Maori at first contact, and even then that won’t do as much work as Doutré would expect it to because Maori are not homogenous in their skin tone or morphology (I am beginning to sound like a Victorian racist; I apologise). Members of Kai Tahu, for example, are very pale in comparison to their more northern kin, but that doesn’t mean that they are caucasian in origin. It just means the environment in which they live (the cold, not so bright South Island) isn’t conducive to high melanin levels ((Doutré does refer to earlier accounts; reports of fair-haired, pale-skinned Polynesians and the like, but the accounts themselves are vague (pale in comparison to other Polynesians or pale like a Palagi?). However, anecdotes do not an argument make.)).

As it stands, Doutré’s account of Aotearoa’s pre-history is fatally flawed from the get go. Still, there is a lot more to say about his article, especially his claims about the Egyptian god Bes.

Celtic New Zealand – The Next Generation

Well, the Franklin Elocal, under the purvey of Mykeljon Winckel, has produced another article promoting the Celtic New Zealand thesis. It’s essentially a summary of Thor Heyerdahl’s `American Indians in the Pacific.’ You can read what I am presuming is Winckel’s article (since he admitted to writing the previous three in the comments thread of Scott’s open letter) here.

What to make of it? Apart from the lack of latter sources to back any of Heyerdahl’s claims up (there’s a reason why his theories have been largely forgotten outside of his home, Norway) Winckel also fails to provide the thing he said (in the comments thread at the Scoop Review of books) he would, which is actual testimony by Maori as to the truth of his claim that:

Maori oral history has always made it clear that people were well established in New Zealand before the coming of Kupe’s fleet.

and:

There are New Zealanders who will tell you emphatically that their ancestors were not Polynesian, but voyaged from South America long ago.

Now, given that the second claim is a bold elaboration on the first, Winkel needs to actually go some way to showing that such people who make such claims do exist. Given that he provides no evidence of this at all it looks like it is a mere assertion, if not an outright lie.

Now, I’m sure some people might well claim something like this (I’m thinking here of Barry Brailford’s sources for the Waitaha Nation thesis he promotes) but it would be nice to know who Winckel is citing for his claims so we can, you know, check out his sources. A drunk down at the Franklin Local ((Hahahaha, see what I did there? Okay, it’s not really that funny.)) is not usually a reliable source but, for all we know, that’s it.

It’s fairly well accepted that for the great migration to have occurred Polynesian peoples must have come here and then gone back to (presumably the Cook Islands) and some of those pre-migration explorers probably settled. Part of the problem for the archaeology of Aotearoa is that many of those first settlements would have been coastal and those sites are lost to us now due to erosion. The date of first settlement will probably never be known, but that really isn’t all that important (to us non-archaeologists) because the more important part of our history is when the major colonisation/settlement effort began, and we have good oral and archaeological evidence as to when that was and where it first occurred.

What we don’t have is good oral and archaeological evidence for a pre-Maori Celtic settlement. If Winckel wants to assert that such evidence exists he needs to point us towards it.

I’ve still got Doutré’s `Uncensored’ article to comment on. His writing style is much more clumsy and laboured that Winckel’s so give me time.

Pipes on Conspiracy Theorists

Well, although the Wii holds the might of my attention I’m still managing to get some reading in between bouts of killing Space Pirates and playing with Rabbids. Daniel Pipes’ ‘Conspiracy: How the Paranoid Style Flourishes and Where It Comes From’ (New York: Free Press, 1997) has this lovely quote which could well be about our Celtic New Zealand scholars.

Conspiracy theorists parade academic titles (“Dr.,” “Professor”), earned or not. No less than conventional historians, they steep themselves in the literature of their subject and become expert in it. The difference lies in their methods; rather than piece together the past through the accumulation of facts, they plunder legitimate historical studies to build huge edifices out of odd and unrelated elements. (Pipes 1997 p. 3)

Back to Wi… work.

1999?

If I were more musically inclined I’d make the title a Prince reference, but that isn’t happening.

Celtic New Zealand Book Notes

(The image comes courtesy of the Fundy Post, who alerted me to the orginating publications presence and location within the University of Auckland’s library.)

So, 1999. As the image above should show to the discerning viewer, something was happening back then. A glut of Celtic New Zealand thesis tomes were produced.

Now, I’m fairly sure 1999 was the period in New Zealand where cheap offset printing became a reality and a whole host of small press publishers appeared, needing things to print. That is what I’m assuming; it may, of course, be utter tripe. Still, these books did appear and people like Doutré do treat publication, in any form, as some kind of public vindication of their theories. That so much paper should be wasted on such projects is scary.

Back to work for me; I have a test to write.

Celts

Well, after thinking ‘That was that’ the editor of the Franklin E Local, Myklejon Winckel has surfaced to attack all and sundry for distorting his words and accusing him, a military man whose mother was a POW, of supporting a Neo-Nazi worldview.

The fun and frolics resumes here.