PMC Multimedia

22 July 2015

VIDEO: New doco takes personal look into how raids harmed Tūhoe lives

The new Kim Webby film shows Tame Iti from a different perspective. Video: PMW/PMC
PMW ID
9360

Alistar Kata
AUCKLAND (Pacific Media Watch): Most audiences are used to seeing Wairere Tame Iti as the Māori activist, who most notably shot the Australian flag at a 2005 Waitangi Tribunal hearing, and recently when he was arrested as part of the 2007 anti-terrorism raids in Te Urewera.

But a new documentary entitled The Price of Peace goes beyond the surface into the world of Tame Iti, and takes a different approach to telling the story of the Tūhoe raids.

Award-winning director and co-producer Kim Webby says she wanted to show all sides of Tame Iti.

“I knew him differently. I knew him as a grandfather and as a father, as a marae committee chairman, you know, a leader in his community.”

The flag-shooting incident in 2005 ... but this intimate documentary provides a wider context for race-relations in New Zealand. Image: ConbrioMediaThe film also addresses the themes of how the media portrayed Tame Iti himself, his court case and the painful impact on the wider Ngāi Tūhoe community.

One of three co-producers on the film, AUT University television lecturer Christina Milligan, says the commercialisation of our media industry is a major issue.

“Our mainstream media is getting whiter and whiter by the day and it's almost like because we have Māori Television, we can now put all the Māori stories, indigenous stories over in that box and its taken care of and the government’s ticked that one off.”

On a wider scope, the film points towards the importance of reconciliation and the state of race relations in the country.

The film screens once more at the New Zealand International Film Festival in Auckland, then tours around the country before airing on Māori Television on October 13.


 

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Alistar Kata

Pacific Media Watch project contributing editor 2015

Alistar Kata is of Cook Island, Māori (Ngapuhi) descent and is a Communication Studies Honours student at AUT and Pacific Media Watch contributing editor.

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