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šŸŽ¬ MCP Enhanced Video Analysis: The Bastion Point Occupation

507 Days on the Land - Cross-Curricular Investigation

šŸ“š Integrated Learning Focus

Historical Analysis: Land rights, protest strategies, government response

Cultural Understanding: Tikanga, whakapapa, connection to whenua

Media Literacy: Documentary techniques, perspective, bias

Civic Engagement: Rights, responsibilities, effective protest

šŸ“¹ Video Learning: Voices from Bastion Point

šŸ“‹ Before You Watch

  • Locate Takaparawhā (Bastion Point) on the class map and identify the rohe of Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei.
  • Review the timeline of land confiscations and housing pressures in Tāmaki Makaurau during the 1970s.
  • Discuss why mana whenua might describe the occupation as an expression of mana motuhake.

Source: 1News | Interview with Hone Harawira reflecting on the 507-day occupation.

šŸ¤” Pātai While Watching

  1. He aha te mana o te whenua ki a Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei i roto i tēnei kōrero?
    What does the whenua mean for Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei, according to the speaker?
  2. What strategies and tikanga helped occupiers sustain 507 days of resistance?
  3. How does Hone Harawira describe the outcomes of the occupation, and why does he say ā€œwe were rightā€?

šŸ’­ After Watching

Think-Pair-Share: Describe one moment from the interview that shows resilience or aroha. Connect it to present-day movements for land or housing justice.

Action Option: Draft a short mihi or letter acknowledging the kaitiaki of Takaparawhā and outlining what rangatahi can learn from their stand.

šŸ”— Supplementary Perspectives

Extend learning with additional voices. Allocate groups to investigate one source and report back with key insights.

  • RNZ Archive: Joe Hawke interviews on the return of Bastion Point.
  • Māori Television: Documentaries featuring kuia and kaumātua recounting Takaparawhā.
  • Witness History (BBC): International coverage highlighting global civil rights links.
  • Government Records: Cabinet papers or police reports giving Crown perspectives (critically analysed).

Critical Thinking Questions

1. The occupation lasted 507 days. What does this teach us about determination, collective leadership, and whanaungatanga?

2. The Crown used a large police force to evict occupiers. What message did that send to Māori communities, and how do you think the public responded?

3. Many activists say they ā€œlost the battle but won the war.ā€ Identify two long-term changes that support this statement, using evidence from the video and supplementary sources.

šŸ“‹ Teacher Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions

Students will engage with this resource to develop a decolonized understanding of Aotearoa's history — reading the past through the eyes of tangata whenua, examining primary sources critically, and understanding how colonisation continues to shape the present. This unit centres mana Māori as the starting point, not a footnote.

Ngā Paearu AngitÅ« — Success Criteria

  • āœ… Students can analyse a historical source for perspective, reliability, and significance — including identifying whose voices are centred or absent.
  • āœ… Students can explain how a specific historical event — such as the NZ Wars, land confiscations, or the Dawn Raids — connects to present-day inequities and Māori-led responses.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide annotated source analysis frames for entry-level access — guiding students through the OPCVL or SOLO process step by step. Offer extension tasks asking students to compare a colonial-era source with a contemporary Māori account of the same event, analysing how the historical narrative has been contested and reclaimed.

ELL / ESOL: Primary source language (particularly 19th-century English) presents specific challenges — pre-read sources with students and pre-teach archaic or specialist vocabulary. Allow students to express historical analysis in their home language first before translating to English. Bilingual glossaries support engagement without reducing intellectual demand. Some ELL students may bring first-hand experience of colonisation from other contexts — honour these as valid comparative perspectives.

Inclusion: Decolonized history can surface difficult emotions for Māori students encountering colonial violence and injustice in the curriculum for the first time. Create a trauma-informed classroom. Neurodiverse learners benefit from chunked tasks and clear analytical scaffolds. Ensure all students understand that the purpose of this unit is not guilt but understanding — and that understanding is the foundation of partnership and change.

Mātauranga Māori lens: Decolonizing history means more than "adding Māori perspectives" — it means recognising that the dominant historical narrative itself is a colonial artefact. Whakapapa is an alternative historical framework: tracing connections, obligations, and continuity across time. The NZ Wars were not distant events — their consequences live in land ownership patterns, economic disparities, and community structures today. Tino rangatiratanga — the right of self-determination — was not surrendered at Waitangi and has been asserted continuously through protest, legislation, and resurgence. Teaching this history is an obligation of Te Tiriti partnership.

Prior knowledge: Students benefit from foundational knowledge of the Treaty of Waitangi and its context. No specialist prior knowledge required for entry-level source analysis tasks — scaffolds are provided.

Curriculum alignment

  • Aotearoa New Zealand Histories — Know: Understand that colonisation was a global process that had a specific and profound impact on tangata whenua in Aotearoa, and that Māori responses to colonisation have been continuous and varied.
  • Do — Social Studies: Explore perspectives, use evidence to form conclusions, and share ideas — analyse primary sources, compare historical perspectives, and present findings.