REFLECTIVE INSIGHTS #064 - THE PEACEMAKER’S WERO: MOKA TE KAINGA-MATAA AND THE ART OF DIALOGUE

Standing Firm on Truth

When you look closely at the true history of Taitokerau, you quickly realise that our greatest victories didn’t come from staying quiet or backing down to keep the peace. The real turning points for our people always happened right on the grassroots soil of the marae, where bold, unfiltered truth was spoken straight into the face of raw power. Today, we are leaning into the fierce legacy of Moka Te Kainga-mataa, the great Patukeha chief who looked past the smooth talking colonial promises at Waitangi in 1840 and demanded an honest audit of the system before anyone dared to sign a piece of paper.

Channelling the True Signal

Moka stood up in front of Governor Hobson and famously questioned the smooth-talking promises being made. He pointed out the pre-existing land purchases and actions of European settlers that had already left his people squeezed. Moka was not trying to cause conflict, he was practicing the art of dialogue, holding a mirror up to power to see if the actions matched the words. This level of visionary pragmatism is exactly what we need today. It directly matches the model left to us by Ihu (Yeshua's name in the Paipera Tapu), who walked into spaces of intense systemic pressure and always prioritised the weightier matters of justice, mercy, and truth.

Read More

REFLECTIVE INSIGHT #015 - THE STOLEN RULES: WHY THE GAME IS RIGGED

The Game We All Know

We have all been there, sitting around the table on a rainy Taitokerau afternoon, the Northland Edition Monopoly board spread out. The tension rises as one whānau member starts hoarding all the hotels, while the rest of the players slowly go broke. We were taught that this is just "how the game works", that for one person to win, everyone else has to lose. But what if I told you that the game we were given is a stolen explanation? What if I told you the original version had a second set of rules, one designed to prove that we can all prosper together?

The Stolen Blueprint

The game we know as Monopoly was actually patented in 1904 by a woman named Elizabeth Magie. She called it The Landlord’s Game, and she did not design it to celebrate greed. She designed it as a wero to the extractive systems of her time. Her original game featured two distinct sets of rules: "Monopolist" and "Prosperity." She wanted to show that how we organise our society is a choice, not a destiny.

Read More