1/15 In his new column Damien Grant characterises defenders of Matauranga Maori as a sinister 'mob', then salutes a group of slave owners, corpse-stealers, & 'scientific' racists as 'pillars of our society'. The debate about science is exposing some double standards.
2/15 Grant is upset at the 2,059 scientists who signed a letter defending Matauranga Maori. The letter was a response to seven scholars who had written to The Listener to argue that Matauranga Maori 'falls far short of science'.
3/15 Grant is also unhappy that the Royal Society Te Aparangi is investigating two members who criticised Matauranga Maori. Grant argues that today's Royal Society is letting down its predecessors. He's right, but not in the way he imagines.
4/15 Grant calls Britain's Royal Society, which was transplanted to NZ in 1867, 'one of the pillars' of our civilisation, because of its 'three & a half centuries of commitment to open & free inquiry'. Royal Society Te Aparangi should 'return' to this great 'tradition'.
5/15 I doubt if the Afro-British slave who was paraded before an audience of Royal Society members in 1697 felt he was taking part in 'free inquiry'. In his account of the slave's examination, William Byrd explained that young man was 'in possession of Captain Charles Wager'.
6/15 The slave was stripped, so that Royal Society members could see the 'white spots' that 'dappled' his body. In 1697 the Society was only a few decades old, but it already owned many slaves, and was involved in the administration of the slave colony of Jamaica.
7/15 Much of the Society's work involved the examination of black bodies, live or dead, & the creation of pseudo-scientific laws about races. The Society was enriched by slavery, & the ideas it developed about lesser and greater races helped justify the slave trade.
8/15 Royal Society fellow Robert Boyle is renowned as a pioneer of chemistry, but he was also fascinated by skin colour. He performed experiments in which he rubbed silver nitrate into skins. Boyle had friends who were slavers; they supplied him with 'material'.
9/15 Even Royal Society members who did not theorise about race or experiment on humans often relied on the slave trade. James Petiver is a famous naturalist. He cultivated friendships with slave ship captains and surgeons, who collected creatures for him on their journeys.
10/15 Sometimes Philosophical Transactions, the periodical of the Royal Society, reads like a slavers' trade journal. In 1755 it ran an article by Stephen Hales about the 'great advantage of ventilation' in 'slave ships'. Hales praises the 'fresh salutary air' ventilation gives
11/15 Scholar Cristina Malcolmson believes that the 'scientific racism' that reached its extreme in Nazi Germany had its origins in the early work of the Royal Society. But the Society was also directly involved in twentieth century racism.
12/15 Both of the key pioneers of eugenics in Britain, Francis Galton & Karl Pearson, were members of the Royal Society. Philosophical Transactions published a long series of articles by Pearson, who believed in the superiority of Anglo-Saxon 'stock'.
13/15 Pearson worried about the impact of Jews on British society. He opposed intermarriage between 'Anglo-Saxons' and Jews, & denounced the immigration of this 'parasitic' & 'alien' race.
14/15 Britain's Eugenics Society featured many senior members of the Royal Society, and used the Royal Society's premises for its meetings. (To its credit, the Royal Society has launched an investigation project into its past links with eugenics.)
15/15 There is a sad gap between the Royal Society's role in slavery & racism & Damien Grant's rhetoric about a great tradition of free inquiry. I hope that the present Royal Society Te Aparangi does disgrace its predecessors, as it tries to overcome its history.

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More from @SikotiHamiltonR

28 Nov
1/7 Paul Verdon is a rugby writer. Altho he likes the All Blacks, he thinks the team should drop the Ka Mate haka, because its author Te Rauparaha was a 'murderer' 'on a par' with Hitler. Does Verdon also call for the abandonment of the NZ flag? It was authored by a mass killer.
2/7 In a piece for Muriel Newman's far right NZCPR site, Verdon calls Te Rauparaha a 'pathological monster'. He highlights Te Rauparaha's part in the Musket Wars, but ignores the facts that Te Rauparaha didn't start those wars, & in fact eventually helped end them.
3/7 Te Rauparaha's last years saw him repairing some iwi r'ships, & promoting Christianity. This final phase in TR's life makes him a somewhat more sympathetic historical figure than, say, Hongi Hika. But if we nevertheless abandon Ka Mate, shouldn't we also junk NZ's flag?
Read 9 tweets
28 Nov
1/4 The Free Speech Union's Jonathan Ayling thinks the reduced influence of his Baptist church is linked to the s'posed moral decline of NZ. As this commenter notes, tho, Baptists can be bigots. I found some disturbing Baptist history when I researched fascism in '30s NZ.
2/4 In 1934 the president of the Baptist Union of NZ, the Rev John Laird, attended the World Baptist Congress in Nazi Germany. Unlike many other German churches, the Baptists had refused to oppose Hitler's seizure of power. Laird was a keen Nazi.
3/4 After Laird returned to his Mt Albert church, he gave a series of talks & interviews in which he promoted Hitler as Germany's saviour. Laird believed Nazi Germany as a land of 'unity, peace & security'. NZ Baptists did not censure Laird - they gave him a platform.
Read 6 tweets
28 Nov
1/10 First there was Jordan Williams, who wanted to take arts grants from Eleanor Catton after she criticised John Key. Then there Elliot Ikilei, who campaigned against drag queens reading in libraries. Now the Free Speech Union has found another representative opposed to freedom
2/10 Jonathan Ayling is the FSU's new Campaigns Manager, & has led recent attacks on critics of Matauranga Maori. Ayling is a fire & brimstone Baptist, who dislikes democracy & yearns for the old days when churches like his held sway over NZ society.
3/10 Before he took a job at FSU, Ayling worked as a lobbyist in Wellington. He campaigned against euthanasia, abortion, & the legalisation of cannabis. He also wrote a series of bizarre articles for the NZ Baptist magazine.
Read 16 tweets
27 Nov
1/4 I'm sorry to hear that Jimmy O'Dea has died at the age of 86. Even if you haven't heard of O'Dea, you've probably seen him. This famous photo shows him being beaten by cops outside Eden Park during the Springbok Tour of 1981. O'Dea's was a life of protest.
2/4 I remembering meeting O'Dea through a barred window back in 1999. He & several other activists had barricaded themselves inside a state house in protest at market rents. The cops eventually cut through the ceiling to evict them.
3/5 O'Dea grew up in Ireland, & was a Republican as well as a Marxist. His Fenianism made him naturally sympathetic to Maori land struggles, & he was heavily involved in the epic occupation of Takaparawhau/Bastion Pt in the '70s.
Read 5 tweets
27 Nov
1/3 Frank Ricard is criticising a Treaty Settlement he hasn't read. Moriori are being compensated not for the 1835 invasion of Rekohu by two north Taranaki iwi, but for the way the Crown took the side of the invaders, by giving them legal title to the land they took.
2/4 Ricard says 'Willie Jackson's tribe' invaded Rekohu. They didn't. Jackson's whakapapa runs through Ngati Maniapoto & Ngati Porou. Neither iwi had anything to do with the 1835 invasion, which was the work of Ngati Mutunga & Ngati Tama.
3/4 In 1829 a force of murderous whites invaded Rekohu on a brig called the Cyprus. P'haps we should hold Ricard, as a Pakeha, responsible for that event? It makes as much sense as linking Jackson to the 1835 invasion.
Read 4 tweets
26 Nov
1/5 Australian cops & troops have been sent to Honiara after protests by the Malaitan community there. The Aussies are not neutral. They have been summoned by an anti-Malaitan government, & Malaita has always been a stronghold of anti-colonial feeling in the Solomons. Image
2/5 In the 19th C the blackbirding ships that sought slaves in Melanesia learned to be wary of landing on Malaita. Scores of white slavers were slain in the island's jungles, & ships were stormed & burnt. Image
3/5 In 1927 the Kwaio people of Malaita slew an Australian tax collector working for British colonial authorities. A retaliatory expedition led by Australian expats slaughtered scores of islanders. Malaitan feeling hardened. Image
Read 6 tweets

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