How could MÄori fight for "freedom" overseas in WWII while facing discrimination and
land loss at home?
What was gained and what was lost when MÄori moved from rural communities to cities?
How did the seeds of modern activism grow from 20th-century struggles?
Return to these questions at each transition; they anchor the
end-of-lesson commitments.
š
Learning Intentions (kaiako version)
Guide Äkonga to analyze the paradoxes and transformations of 20th-century MÄori
experience, from war service to urban migration to the emergence of new forms of
protest.
Interrogate the "WWII paradox"āfighting for colonial power while denied full
citizenship rights.
Analyze the push-pull factors of urban migration and its cultural impacts.
Evaluate how urban MÄori communities maintained identity while adapting to new
environments.
Connect 20th-century experiences to the activism explosion of Lesson 4.
ā
Success Criteria (Äkonga-facing)
I can explain the "paradox" of the MÄori Battalionāwhat they were fighting for and
what they faced at home.
I can describe two reasons why MÄori moved to cities and two challenges they faced
there.
I can identify how urban MÄori created new forms of community and identity.
I can connect one 20th-century issue to a movement we'll study in Lesson 4.
šæ
Te MÄtaiaho threads visible in this lesson
Tangata Whenuatanga Ā· PS4: Äkonga examine how tÅ«puna navigated
structural barriers while maintaining mana motuhake.
MÄtauranga MÄori: Urban marae, MÄori clubs, and pan-tribal identity
formation as cultural adaptation.
Te Tiriti-honouring practice: Critical analysis of Crown policies
(pepper-potting, assimilation) that violated te Tiriti principles.
Hauora: Examining the wellbeing impacts of displacement and
community rebuilding.
WhakatÅ«whera - NgÄ Tai o te Huringa (The Tides of Change)
The 20th Century was a time of massive fluid movementāfrom rural homelands to urban centres, and across
oceans to war. Like the tide, these movements were powerful and reshaped the landscape of MÄori
identity. We honor the resilience of those who navigated these waters.
"He aha te mea nui o te ao? He tangata, he tangata, he tangata." - What is the
most important thing? It is people, it is people, it is people.
Distribute the MÄori Battalion Legacy Companion
before viewing. This RNZ documentary explores the 28th (MÄori) Battalion's extraordinary service and
the contradictions they faced.
Before viewing: Discuss what students know about WWII and MÄori participation.
Introduce the concept of "fighting for freedom while not free at home."
During viewing: Pause at 4:15 (personal testimonies), 7:30 (homecoming
reality), and 10:00 (legacy reflections) to complete guided prompts.
After viewing: Transition into the jigsaw activity comparing military service
experience with urban migration experience.
Formative checkpoint: Collect the paradox analysis sheets and testimony
reflection strips as MÄtainuku evidence.
Prime Äkonga with the companion's vocabulary preview. Focus on the
"paradox"āextraordinary courage and sacrifice abroad, discrimination and land loss at home.
š MÄtanga Whispers: The "Price of
Citizenship"
Sir Apirana Ngata famously said the 28th Battalion would pay the
"price of citizenship" with their blood. Critique this.
Did it work? When soldiers returned, they were still barred from RSA clubs and refused
bank loans.
Insight: The price was paid, but the goods (equality) were not delivered. This
betrayal fueled the activism of their children in the 1970s.
Evidence to bank: Paradox analysis sheets, testimony highlights, and
emotional response journals.
3. Jigsaw Expert Groups ā War & Migration (25 mins)
Divide class into two expert groups. Each group becomes the
"expert" on their topic before teaching others.
Group A: MÄori Battalion
Legacy
Read the Battalion Legacy Handout.
Key
questions: What motivated enlistment? What was the homecoming experience? How did
service affect rights expectations?
Group B: Urban Migration &
Identity
Read the Urban MÄori Identity
Handout. Key
questions: What pushed MÄori to cities? What challenges arose? How was identity
maintained and transformed?
š¬ Science Lens: Epidemiology & Urban Housing
Why did urban migration lead to health
crisis?
1. The 1918 Flu Lesson
MÄori Councils (*Komiti Marae*) enacted strict quarantine
and sanitation that often saved villages, but were ignored by central government,
leading to 7x higher death rates. This distrust of state health persisted.
2. Rheumatic Fever Physics
Cold, damp state houses + "pepper-potting" (scattering
families to force assimilation) created perfect transmission vectors for
*Streptococcus*. It wasn't just "bad luck"āit was built environment engineering.
š Global Context: From Black Panthers to
Polynesian Panthers
US (1966): The Black Panther Party fights police
brutality and runs breakfast programs.
NZ (1971): Young Pacific and
MÄori, seeing the same racism, form the Polynesian Panthers. They adopt the
same "tigers for rights" aesthetic (berets, leather jackets) and community focus (homework
centres, legal aid). Civil rights is a global language.
Jigsaw Process (15 mins):
Expert phase (8 mins): Groups read their material and prepare key
points to teach.
Teaching phase (7 mins): Form new pairs with one member from each
group. Each person teaches their topic.
4. Timeline Construction ā Connecting the Century (15 mins)
As a class, construct a visual timeline connecting: Land loss
(1860s) ā War service (1940s) ā Urban migration (1950s-70s) ā Activism emergence (1970s+).
Facilitate a structured reflection connecting personal to historical.
Exit questions (written or verbal):
What was one major challenge and one major
opportunity for MÄori in the 20th century?
If your whÄnau experienced urban migration, what stories do you know? If not, what
would you want to ask?
What do you predict the activists of the 1970s were fighting for, based on what we
learned today?
š Formative Assessment, MÄtairea Support & Moderation Workflow
MÄtainuku evidence you can hold in your hands
Collect at least three artefacts per student and note progression
language for tagging uploads.
Paradox analysis sheets: Show understanding of the contradiction
between war service and domestic discrimination.
Jigsaw teaching notes: Evidence of comprehension and ability to explain
key concepts to peers.
Timeline annotations: Connections made between historical periods.
Exit reflections: Challenge/opportunity analysis and personal
connections.
MÄtairea differentiation moves
Scaffold: Provide graphic organizers for jigsaw notes; offer
bullet-point summaries of readings; pair strategic readers together.
Extend: Research specific Battalion members or urban MÄori leaders;
create oral history interview questions for whÄnau members who experienced migration.
Wellbeing: Some Äkonga may have whÄnau who served in WWII or
experienced urban displacementācreate space for sharing with care. Acknowledge the
emotional weight of these histories.
Kaiako checkpoints after each phase
During primary source analysis, check that each learner can articulate at least one
observation and one question.
At documentary pause points, verify understanding of the "paradox" concept.
During jigsaw teaching phase, listen for accurate knowledge transfer between partners.
At exit reflection, collect evidence of personal connection or future-looking
predictions.
Watch additional MÄori Battalion documentary content and add to your paradox analysis.
Whakaaro - Reflection
The 20th century was a time of profound
transformationāMÄori serving with extraordinary courage overseas while facing discrimination at
home, leaving ancestral lands for city opportunities, and slowly building the momentum that would
explode into the activism of the 1970s.
"He aha te mea nui o te ao? He tangata, he tangata,
he tangata." ā What is the most important thing? It is people, it is people, it is people. Through
every displacement and challenge, MÄori communities found ways to maintain connection.