Business_Spotlight_No3_202..

(Joyce) #1

26 Business Spotlight 3/2020 INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION


“The Maori have a very kin-oriented relationship with
the natural world,” says Maori Brad Coombes, an expert on
the Maori relationship with the land and environment and a
senior lecturer at the School of Environment at the University
of Auckland. “We don’t separate our own lines of descent from
the descent of other species. They intermingle.”
The Maori, therefore, have traditionally had a spiritual asso-
ciation with the land, water and soil. Not only do they derive
their sense of identity from these elements, but they also see
themselves as guardians of the natural world. “Inevitably, the
relationship to things like forests and food gathering sources
changed over time,” says Coombes. “But the importance of tra-
ditional land to the whole belief system of the Maori cannot be
underestimated.”
European settlement followed Captain James Cook’s three
voyages, the first of which was in 1769. In their own way, the new
settlers also appreciated the beauty and value of the land, and
later they formed deep associations with it as farmers. But while
Europeans brought modernity, industrialization and affluence,
they also introduced invasive species and new diseases. The
result has been the depletion of vast areas of forests, polluted
rivers and the extinction of a large number of endemic animal
and plant species. Today, biodiversity is rapidly declining and
40 per cent of indigenous plants are threatened with extinction
in this century. Around 74 per cent of the country’s indigenous
freshwater fish are threatened, as are more than 40 per cent of
bird species.

The importance of agriculture
In 1840, a number of Maori chiefs signed the Treaty of Waitan-
gi with the British. The Maori interpreted the treaty as giving
them a degree of sovereignty and control over their own affairs
and land. The British saw things differently. One way or anoth-
er, the Maori lost control of increasing areas of land throughout
the 19th and 20th centuries. Vast parts of the country today
are given over to agriculture, a lucrative part of which is dairy
farming. New Zealand has a human population of 4.9 million, a
dairy cattle population of 6.5 million and a sheep population of
27.5 million. Unsurprisingly, the country’s biggest exports are
milk and meat products. New Zealand accounts for a colossal

Maori culture:
a strong tie
to the natural
world

affluence [(ÄfluEns]
, Wohlstand
appreciate sth.
[E(pri:SieIt]
, etw. zu schätzen wissen
dairy cattle
[(deEri )kÄt&l]
, Milchkühe
dairy farming
[(deEri )fA:mIN]
, Milchwirtschaft
decline [di(klaIn]
, zurückgehen, schwinden
depletion [di(pli:S&n]
, Erschöpfung, Schwund

derive sth. from sth.
[di(raIv frQm] , etw. aus
etw. ab-, herleiten
descent [di(sent]
, Abstammung
extinction [Ik(stINkS&n]
, Aussterben, Ausrottung
freshwater fish
[)freSwO:tE (fIS]
, Süßwasserfisch(e)
indigenous [In(dIdZEnEs]
, einheimisch
inevitably
[In(evItEbli]
, zwangsläufig

intermingle
[)IntE(mINg&l]
, sich vermischen
kin [kIn]
, Verwandtschaft
polluted [pE(lu:tId]
, verschmutzt
senior lecturer
[)si:niE (lektSErE]
, außerordentliche(r)
Professor(in)
soil [sOI&l] , Boden
sovereignty
[(sQvrEnti]
, Souveränität
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