New Zealands dairy industry should stop using Mori culture to pretend its sustainable – The Guardian

Posted: May 17, 2022 at 7:01 pm

New Zealands dairy industry is under pressure. It is one of our biggest earners, accounting for roughly 3% of our GDP; and since cows were first brought here about 200 years ago, dairy farming has taken on cultural significance for Pkeh (NZ Europeans) especially.

But it is also attracting increasing scrutiny. As well as polluting our land and waterways, dairy is to blame for large amounts of greenhouse gas emissions. Jacinda Arderns Labour government has developed legislation to mitigate environmental pollution, but critics say it is not adequately addressing the harm dairying causes.

The industry received even more unwanted attention recently with the release of award-winning documentary Milked, which follows Mori activist Chris Huriwai (Ngpuhi, Ngati Porou, Te tiawa) as he reflects on his awa (river), Mangatawa, at Otaua, and exposes the negative impacts of dairy for Aotearoa and the world. And in March, Safe, New Zealands leading animal rights organisation, launched its Done with Dairy campaign, highlighting its harms.

In response to such criticism, the dairy industry is fighting for credibility. One strategy it appears to be using is what we might call kei te pai-washing or pai-washing for short. Like whitewashing, which aims to cover up unpleasant facts, or greenwashing, which paints organisations as more environmentally-friendly than they really are, pai-washing uses Mori words, concepts and imagery to exploit the association between te ao Mori (the Mori world) and environmental responsibility almost like an Indigenous tick of approval. It is a cynical attempt to convey the impression that everything is kei te pai, or all good, with this extremely harmful practice.

In my opinion, Fonterra, New Zealands largest dairy company, has become especially adept at pai-washing. More recently, it contracted a kaiwhakairo (carver) to tell our story through the creation of a pou, a traditional expression of Mori connectedness to land.

But is dairy really kei te pai?

Anyone who has travelled through New Zealand knows that much of the land now consists of paddocks. Most of this was cleared in the mid- to late-19th and 20th centuries desecration which left Aotearoa bereft of its native forests, as well as birds, insects, reptiles and amphibians. Historically, it is mainly sheep which have been farmed here; but over the last 30 years or so, dairy farming has intensified, and so has its degradation of the environment.

Of course, some Mori communities have also chosen to engage in dairying but the reasons for this are complex. Economic marginalisation, resulting from dispossession, land confiscation and racism, has left us with fewer choices than we once had. And the desire to stay connected to our whenua (land) has sometimes made dairying seem more viable.

But the notion that dairy can somehow be made sufficiently sustainable is a myth and it is one that focuses only on the environmental impacts of the industry, ignoring its health impacts for consumers and workers, and the lives and wellbeing of the animals it exploits.

Dairying is not simply unsustainable; it violates Mori values.

As Mori, we understand ourselves as kaitiaki carers for te taiao (the natural world). Although some dairy companies would have us believe that farmers are kaitiaki, such environmentally destructive work is ultimately incompatible with tiakitanga (caregiving).

Another value, whanaungatanga, recognises that we are related, through ancestry, not only to each other, but to the wider natural world as well. Consequently, we have responsibilities to treat it respectfully. But far from treating the more-than-human world with respect, the dairy industry is extractive, engaging in a one-sided transaction: as ecofeminists have argued, it exploits female bodies, by forcefully impregnating cows, stealing their milk and separating mothers from calves. Worse, it slaughters individuals who are more profitable to stakeholders dead than alive.

(Considering how much death Fonterras farmers are complicit in of bobby calves as well as dairy cows it is ironic that the company uses the slogan Dairy for Life to sell itself.)

Dairying also undermines hauora (wellbeing). Research has linked dairy consumption to diabetes, heart disease and cancer all of which impact Mori at disproportionate rates. And it is likely that, on average, Mori are more lactose-intolerant than Pkeh. Just as concerning are the psychological impacts on workers charged with killing animals, including newborns.

It isnt just big corporations that must stop. Ultimately, Mori need to divest from dairy too.

Those who defend Mori involvement in dairying sometimes cite rangatiratanga as a principle that allows us to do what we want. Rangatiratanga is often interpreted narrowly, as sovereignty, or self-determination; but it also involves responsibility to others and to the wider world. It requires us to strive for ways of living that are respectful, nurturing and sustainable.

And if you listen attentively, you will hear that many Mori communities who are exercising rangatiratanga are, in fact, moving away from dairy. Some hap (subtribes) have started transitioning their dairy operations to traditionally inspired ventures, focusing instead on regenerating native bush and growing crops for their people. At the same time, many iwi (tribes) are investing in sustainable alternatives to dairy, such as housing and horticulture.

This connects to broader efforts to restore whenua, reinvigorate traditional Mori gardening practices, promote food and soil sovereignty, and become para kore (waste-free).

These aspirations are reflected in Aotearoas ever-changing culture: in our growing sustainability movement and in the increasing number of New Zealanders Mori and non-Mori who are embracing vegetarian, vegan and kaimanga (Mori plant-based) living.

There is a better way forward. The rest of Aotearoa will appreciate this if instead of misusing Mori culture they listen to Mori and learn about the alternatives we are developing, with aroha (love) for the environment, non-human animals and people.

Link:

New Zealands dairy industry should stop using Mori culture to pretend its sustainable - The Guardian

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