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Home / Northern Advocate

Eva Bradley: Flag debate revives Kiwi pride

By Eva Bradley
Bay of Plenty Times·
23 Sep, 2015 04:00 AM3 mins to read

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Regardless of the results of the flag referendum, the invaluable byproduct is that for the first time in a long time our sense of patriotism and community is being given a shot of adrenalin. Photo / File

Regardless of the results of the flag referendum, the invaluable byproduct is that for the first time in a long time our sense of patriotism and community is being given a shot of adrenalin. Photo / File

Patriotism and nationhood are things we tend to associate with the past - the "glory days" when brave young Kiwi men left on battleships to fight for the flag and the free world in distant lands.

Since then we've had other seminal moments in history which have served to fuel our pride in being New Zealanders: Sir Ed knocking off Everest in 1953, Peter Snell knocking off world running records in the 1960s, taking a stand on South Africa's apartheid policy during the 1981 Springbok tour and then United States' nuclear weapons policy two years later.

The flag debate may be causing some division, but it has given us the opportunity to discover that as a nation we do actually care about the colours we stand under.

Eva Bradley

In 1987, we had World Cup rugby glory and in the 90s Sir Peter Blake generated national pride and New Zealand identity by showing the brilliant little guy could out-perform the wealthy big one.

But since then (with the exception of another Rugby World Cup in 2011 and the odd Olympic blaze of glory), the sorts of major events that generate and fuel the fire of nationhood have been few and far between.

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Rapid changes in technology, globalisation and the shift towards user-pays from the nanny state have chipped away at "we" in favour of "me". If you'd asked me a year ago how I ranked our sense of national pride from one to 10, I'd have given us a sluggish three or four.

But an extraordinary confluence of national and world events recently have made me reconsider that.

The flag debate may be causing some division, but it has given us the opportunity to discover that as a nation we do actually care about the colours we stand under, and the process has triggered an important conversation about what it means to be a Kiwi. When you look at it like that, $25 million seems rather cheap.

At the same time as we've been considering the flag that represents us, the Syrian crisis has prompted us to look at who should be represented by it.

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And yet across the Ditch in the "lucky country", Kiwis who would almost certainly consider themselves Australians are kicked out of the club, ostensibly for petty crimes, but realistically for the greater crime of not being a citizen. It's ironic given that at one point in Australia's history, the only thing you did require to step ashore and stay there was a conviction.

Some support Australia's new tough-line attitude to citizenship and refugees. Others don't.

Closer to home, Hawke's Bay is the latest region to reject amalgamation of its councils. Which is a different issue from flags, refugees and citizenship, but not much different.

It's still about all of us looking closely at who we are and where we belong, and having community dialogue about it.

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Regardless of the results, the invaluable byproduct is that for the first time in a long time our sense of patriotism and community (global and local) is being given a shot of adrenaline not being administered by an athlete or someone holding a weapon.

That can only be a good thing. A great thing.

I might disagree with some of the practical decisions that are being made (don't even get me started on the "Red Peak" squabble), but I'd rather see New Zealanders standing up, communicating passionately about who we are, than sitting down in isolated insouciance.

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