Donald Trump's crass response to the violence that resulted from a protest against the removal of a statue of the Confederate General Robert E Lee in Charlottesville, Virginia, last month, overwhelmed an important issue of how the modern world regards history. It was only a matter of time before the
NZ Herald editorial: We can respect the past without sharing its view
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The Nixon Monument memorial at Otahuhu. Photo / Google
If the southern states of America cannot now live with statues of those who figured so significantly in their history, more is the pity. That is their problem. It does not mean we need follow suit. New Zealand's colonial wars are well past. They were, like most wars, a terrible mistake. To modern historians the King Movement looks to have been an attempt to preserve Maori land and rights guaranteed them by the Treaty of Waitangi, and the invasion of the Waikato a simple land grab.
But like all wars for those alive at the time, questions of rights and motives would have been quickly overwhelmed by tensions and fears, threats and violence, reprisals and deaths. Otahuhu was founded as a military camp for the defence of Auckland, as was Howick. Their memorials to that mark a heritage they do not need to remove even if they could. The past happened for better or worse, and it deserves more respect than it receives in the writing of history today.
We live in a time that seldom hesitates to impose its moral superiority on those who lived by the standards and beliefs of their time. The monuments they wanted to leave for us were important to them and we can respect their wish without sharing the attitudes of their time.