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Reality Of A Common 'We'

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  • Reality Of A Common 'We'

    REALITY OF A COMMON 'WE'
    Jone Baledrokadroka

    Fiji Times
    http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=10044 8
    Sept 12 2008
    Fiji

    According to J Z. Muller in the enduring power of ethnic nationalism
    (Us and Them: Foreign Affairs, Mar/Apr 2008), there are two major
    ways of thinking about national identity.

    One is that all people who live within a country's borders are part of
    the nation, regardless of their ethnic, racial, or religious origins.

    This liberal or civic nationalism is the concept with which the Draft
    Peoples Charter would like all to identify with.

    But the liberal view has competed with and often lost out to a
    different view, that of ethnonationalism.

    The core of the ethnonationalist idea is that nations are defined by
    a shared heritage, which usually includes a common language, a common
    faith, and a common ethnic ancestry.

    We will now look at the politics of identity through this phenomenon
    of ethnonationalism and trace its origins through the indigenous
    Fijians' history.

    For it is in understanding our local brand of ethnonationalism that we
    can deal with its real or perceived core concerns in building a nation.

    Ethnonationalism draws much of its emotive power from the notion that
    the members of a nation are part of an extended family, ultimately
    united by ties of blood.

    It is the subjective belief in the reality of a common "we" that
    counts.

    The markers that distinguish the in-group vary from case to case and
    time to time, and the subjective nature of the communal boundaries
    has led some to discount their practical significance (Muller: 2008).

    But as the inventor of the word - ethnonationalism, Walker Connor,
    an astute student of nationalism, has noted, "It is not what is,
    but what people believe is that has behavioural consequences."

    It could be said that it was Sir Arthur Gordon's 'Fiji for the
    Fijian' Policy in 1876 that planted the seed of modern Fijian
    ethnonationalism. For the formation of the Great Council of Chiefs
    that year articulated in the minds of the Fijian chiefs a Fijian
    political entity of a geographic realm. More so the creation of the
    three vanua Confederacies of Kubuna, Burebasaga and Tovata was in fact
    ethnonationalistic traditional engineering in support of colonial rule.

    For prior to this entity Fijian political consciousness was traced
    through folklore to the Nakauvadra/Vuda migration and the founding
    tribal state of Verata around 15-1600AD.

    It is, however, doubtful that Fijian political consciousness through
    folklore can be traced to the Lapita people's eastward migration some
    1000BC or 3000 years ago as pottery excavations show at Bourewa beach,
    Nadroga in April this year.

    The Lapita people (identified by their pottery style) were the first
    to move across the Pacific, probably from the Bismarck Archipelago
    in what is now Papua New Guinea.

    Their role in Fiji has long been speculated on though it is now
    thought that the Lapita people rapidly evolved into modern Polynesians,
    including the New Zealand Maori.

    This gives rise to the contending thesis that the present Melanesian
    stock of people in Fiji is of a later migration wave to that of
    the Lapita.

    In resisting the encroachment of Christian conversion the following
    excerpt is a testament to pre-Christian ethnonationalistic belief and
    sentiments of the so-called Kai Colo in dealing with the Kai Wai or
    "them" of the out group.

    An eye witness report of Cakobau's Christianisation war campaign in
    Ba in The Fiji Times July 23, 1870 stated, "The mountaineers from
    Navosa came down to Nalotu, an inland district, hitherto subject to
    Ba and the advanced fortress, or Bai-ni-mua of the Ba people.

    They put up a war fence, and then Wawabalavu, the Navosa chief,
    called out and said, "You Nalotu people, I am Wawabalavu. It was
    I who ate Mr Baker, and the Bau men. Do you trust the Lasakau men
    (fishermen and sea warriors of Bau). Don't, their trade is fishing."

    The mountaineers were let into the fortress and a frightful slaughter
    of native Fijians who had accepted christianity ensued as the Nalotu
    people had chosen to believe their fellow hillmen's rhetoric.

    Hence the blood bond now known as the Tako-Lavo relationship of Viti
    Levu hill tribes was manipulatively used by Nawawabalavu to facilitate
    this treachery.

    Today, however, in an ironic twist Wesleyan christianity has morphed
    with Fijian ethnonationalist fervour as witnessed in the 1987 and
    2000 coups mainly due to its Fijian ethnic majority.

    To put it gently, the once oppressor of ethnonationalism has now
    become its vehicle of political ideaology.

    The portrayal of the "out group" is again herein recalled to illustrate
    the distrust that festered in some indigenous minds of the past and
    one may argue residually exsists today.

    On January 22, 1875 at Navuso, Naitasiri, Administrators along with
    Ratu Cakobau and his two sons who had returned from Sydney, Australia
    briefed some eight-hundred hill chiefs and their tribal retinues on
    the implications of Fiji's new status as a Colony.

    Ratu Cakobau and his two sons had been sick on the trip back to Levuka.

    With no quarantine laws in place, they carried back with them this
    measels strain from aboard the HMS Dido to Navuso.

    The measels epidemic that befell Fiji in 1875 from January to about
    June 1875 which wiped out 30% or 50,000 of its indigenous population
    was a tragedy of the first order.

    This tragedy coming hot on the heels of their forced conversion to
    christianity and colonial cession were in the minds of particular
    chiefs of Viti Levu hill tribes - a foreign conspiracy.

    Unfortunately this distrust of "them foreigners" as engrained in the
    Kai Colo psyche have since in some way been pointed at all other late
    comers to our shores by ethnonationalists.

    As such, Sir Arthur Gordon's pardon of the mutinous Hill Tribes of
    Viti Levu in 1876 was in reconciallatory acknowledgement of this
    tragedy of history.

    Except for Navosavakadua's Tuka sect and the early colonial indigenous
    commercial enterprise Viti Kabani, ethnonationalism lay dormant for
    some one hundred years under colonial rule as Fijians were quite
    content with being British subjects under monarchical rule if not
    only symbolic.

    After Independence ethnonationalism first arose with Nationalist
    Sakeasi Butadroka's cry of 'Fiji for the Fijians' much to the annoyance
    of the chiefly led Alliance mainstream party with its all-inclusive
    racial policies.

    This artificial political faþade was hardwired to fail given the
    flawed compromise of the 1970 constitution.

    Robert Norton in his work on ethnonationalism in Fiji stated,
    "Conflict between indigenous Fijians and immigrant Indians, though
    strongly based in economic and socio-cultural differences, has not
    been intensified by acquiring a function in the reconstruction of
    identities previously suppressed.

    "Manipulation of ideals and symbols by Fijian leaders to secure
    popular support has tended to reaffirm established frames of routine
    social and political life within Fijian groups, rather than being an
    innovative assertion of distinctiveness in opposition to 'the other'."

    However, as has happen in Fiji in the aftermath of the Coups of
    1987 and 2000, the triumph of ethnonational politics as some would
    label the SVT and later SDL parties rule, has meant the victory of
    traditionally rural groups over more urbanised ones, which possess
    just those skills desirable in an advanced industrial economy.

    In addition the resultant forced migrations including after the 2006
    'Guardian' coup in Fiji, generally penalised Fiji-the expelling
    country and reward the receiving ones.

    Again as in the case of Fiji, forced migration is often driven by
    a majority group's resentment of a minority group's success, on the
    mistaken assumption that achievement is a zero-sum game.

    But countries that got rid of their Armenians, Germans, Greeks,
    Jews, and other successful minorities deprived themselves of some
    of their most talented citizens, who simply took their skills and
    knowledge elsewhere.

    As somewhat perceived by Fiji's military prior to the 2006 coup,
    ethnonationalist ideology such as the Qoliqoli and Reconciliation Bill
    called for congruence between the State and the ethnically defined
    nation, with explosive results.

    As Lord Acton recognised in 1862, "By making the State and the
    nation commensurate with each other in theory, reduces practically
    to a subject condition all other nationalities that may be within
    the boundary."

    Analysts of ethnonationalism typically focus on its destructive
    effects, which is understandable given the direct human suffering it
    has often entailed.

    In fact the first and second world wars were direct results of the
    destructive aspects of this phenomenon.

    However, if ethnonationalism has frequently led to tension and
    conflict, it has also proved to be a source of cohesion and stability.

    Muller contends, when French textbooks began with "Our ancestors the
    Gauls" or when Churchill spoke to wartime audiences of "this island
    race", they appealed to ethnonationalist sensibilities as a source
    of mutual trust and sacrifice.

    In similar fashion, Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna, Fiji's first Statesman in
    recruiting Fijians for war duty stated that as a nation, Fiji would
    not be recognised unless its sons sacrificed blood on the battlefields
    for freedom.

    Hence in concluding on a positive note for Fiji, as in European
    history, ethnonationalism was not a chance detour.

    It corresponds to some enduring propensities of the human spirit
    that are heightened by the process of modern state creation, it is
    a crucial source of both solidarity and enmity, and in one form or
    another, it will remain for many generations to come. One can only
    profit from facing it directly.

    As such Liberal democracy and ethnic homogeneity are not only
    compatible; they can be complementary.

    We as a nation will have to learn to live with it along with the
    intended civic and more liberal nationalism as espoused by the Draft
    People's Charter.

    * The views expressed in this article may not necessarily reflect
    those of this newspaper.

    --Boundary_(ID_QLKHKwAET8rlE173Okkdng) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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