יום שני, 5 במאי 2014

THE WHITE GODS ARE BETTER THAN THE BLACK ONES - THE CARGO CULT'S HAVE MANY MANY MISSIONARIES IN THE LAST FIVE HUNDRED YEARS NOW IS THE TURN OF THE YELLOW ONES ,,,GODS OR MISSIONARIES IS THE SAME THE TIME OF THE WHITE MAN IS OFF

He was a clever man, however, and had other things to 
say well worth attending to. 
He had LIVEd much among the Maori; we were passing through the scenes 
of the last great native war, and he pointed out the spots 
where anything interesting had happened. 
He had known many of the missionaries, too, in the days of their 
consequence. 
They do not flourish now, being an organisation suited better 
to Crown 
colonies than to local constitutional governments, and their 
work among the Maori has shrunk far within its old dimen- 
sions. So much passion gathers about these good people and 
their doings that it is difficult to learn anything about them 
which it is possible to believe. So extravagant is the praise 
of the few, so violent the abuse from the many, that I was glad 
to hear a rational account of them from a moderate and well- 
informed man. 

The Maori, like every other aboriginal people with whom 
we have come in contact, learn our vices faster than our 
virtues. 
They have been ruined physically, they have been 
demoralised, by drink. 
They love their poison, 
and their grateful remembrance of the missionaries has taken 
the form of attributing the precious acquisition to them. 
''Missionaries good men,^' they say; '^ brought three excellent 
things with them — gunpowder, rum, and tobacco.*' One need 
not defend the missionaries against having brought either the 
one or the other; but it is true ^at, both in New Zealand and 
elsewhere, the drink has followed them, as their shadow. 
They have opened the road, and the speculative traders have 
come in behind them, and they have fought in vain against 
the appetite when it has been once created. The Maori do 
not distinguish between the use and the abuse, and they have 

humour in them, as a story shows which Mr. F told me. 

A missionary and a chief, whose name I think was Tekoi — it 
will do at any rate>-were intimate friends. The chief had 
great virtues : he was brave, he was true, he was honest— but 
he could not resist rum. Many times the missionary found 
him drunk, and at last said to him, "Tekoi, good man, I love 
you much. Don't drink fire-water. If you do, Tekoi, you 
will lose your property, you will lose your character, you will 
lose your healtb, and in the end your life. Nay, Tekoi, worse 
than that, you will lose your immortal souL'' Tekoi listened 
with stony features. He went away. Days passed, and weeks 
and months, and the missionary saw no more of him. It 
seemed, however, that he wad not far off and was biding 
his time. About a year after, one stormy night the mis- 
sionary, who had been out upon his rounds, came home 
drenched and shivering. The fire burnt bright, the room was 
warm; the missionary put on dry clothes, had his supper, and 
felt comfortable. He bethought himself that if he was to 
make sure of escaping cold, a glass of hot whisky-punch be- 
fore he went to bed would not be inexpedient. His Maori 
servant brought in the kettle. The whisky bottle came out 
of the cupboard, with the sugar and lemons. The fragrant 
mixture was compounded and just at his lips, when the door 
opened, a tattooed face looked in, a body followed, and ther^ 

 

Stood TekoL **LittLE father/' he said, "do not drink fire- 
water. If you drink fire-water, little father, you will lose 
your property, you will lose your character, you will lose 
your health. Perhaps you will lose your life. Nay, little 
father, you will lose But that shall not he. 
Your immortal soul is more precious than mine. The drink will hurt 
me less than it will hurt you. To save your soul, I will drink 
it myself.'* 

Another story which Mr. F told me showed that the 

Maori's questions were as troublesome, occasionally, to the 
missionaries as the inquiring Zulu was to Bishop Colenso. 
One of them being threatened if he was wicked with being 
sent to outer darkness where fire and brimstone burnt for ever, 
said, "I don't believe that. How can there be darkness where 
a fire is always burning?" 

Mr. F took leave of us at a side station; in another 

half-hour we were at the terminus, a hundred miles from 
Auckland, at a place which bore the ambitious name of Cam- 
bridge. Oxford was twenty miles further, on the coach road 
to the lakes, and the names at least of the two great English 
universities had been revived at the antipodes. Cambridge 
was a large and fast-growing settlement, a village developing 
into a town, on the edge of the Maori location, to which it 
had once belonged. It was forfeited after the war. The land 
all round is excellent. The houses, hastily built, were all, 
or most of them, of wood; but they were large and showy. 
A post-office, a town hall, a public library, and a church in- 
dicated a busy centre of life and energy. 

There were two hotels, with extensive stables, with boards 
indicating that post horses and carriages were provided 
there. Coaches, breaks, waggonettes were standing about, 
and there were all the signs of considerable traffic. It meant 
that Cambridge was the point of departure to the hot lakes, 
to and from which swarms of tourists were passing and re- 
passing. The attraction was partly the picturesque and 
wonderful character of the scenery; but the sulphur-springs 
had become also a sanitary station. The baths were credited 
with miraculous virtues, and were the favourite; resort of in*