I’ve been enjoying a book that an old friend gave me for Christmas. This Is Us: New Zealanders in Our Own Words was written (or perhaps I should say compiled) by Pete Carter, whom I’d never heard of, and was inspired by the 2019 Christchurch mosque shootings.
It might seem downright perverse to say I’m enjoying a book
inspired by one of the darkest events in our history, but it isn’t about the shootings. Rather, it was written
as a reaction to them. The title is a play on Jacinda Ardern’s famous comment in
which she said of the victims, “They are us” – three words that encapsulated the
ideal of a culturally diverse and inclusive New Zealand.
Carter took that as a cue to interview 200 New Zealanders
about their lives. The resulting book is a resounding affirmation of the values and qualities
that make this one of the world’s most tolerant, civilised and liberal (in the classical
sense) societies.
This Is Us thus serves as a potent antidote not just to the
poisonous ideology that motivated Brenton Tarrant, but also to the shrill,
embittered disciples of wokeness – and their many supporters in the media – who
condemn New Zealand as hateful, bigoted and oppressive.
Carter’s interview subjects represent a snapshot of contemporary
New Zealand. The book touches almost every point on the demographic spectrum: white
and coloured, young and old, urban and rural, blue-collar battlers and prosperous
blue-bloods, New Zealand-born and recently arrived. There are shearers,
schoolkids, checkout operators, butchers, tattooists, ski instructors, solo mums,
hairdressers, artists, winemakers, hospitality workers, nurses, cops, road
workers, bus drivers, ex-cons and bank managers.
Refreshingly, only two or three of the interview subjects could be described as famous. Most are unknown and all are identified only by their first names. The Usual Suspects - the wearisomely familiar people who normally dominate the public conversation - are conspicuous by their absence, and the book is all the better for it.
The interviews
are short, mostly taking up only half a page and each accompanied by a photo of
the interviewee. They are engagingly frank and idiosyncratic, touching on
everything from jobs and careers to sport, religion, mental health, family history
and relationships. All the subjects have interesting stories to tell.
This Is Us is not
a whitewash. As Carter notes in his introduction, there is racism in New
Zealand (undoubtedly, but it doesn’t define us). Mental illness is a problem, he
says, and there are too many have-nots.
But if there’s a unifying theme running through the
interviews, it’s one of positivity and optimism. Whether they were born here or
arrived as immigrants, the interviewees convey a powerful feeling
that New Zealand is a good place to be. I defy anyone to read it and not feel
the same.
Perhaps this explains why I’ve seen very little publicity
about this book, and no reviews. It’s far too much at odds with the relentlessly
negative, self-flagellating message promoted by woke ideologues and pushed daily by their hand-wringing accomplices in the media.
■ This Is Us: New
Zealanders in Our Own Words is published by Exisle Publishing and is widely
available for $39.99. I heartily recommend it.
Mental illness is indeed a problem, particularly for the mainstream media with its obsessions of race hatred and guilt, not to forget climate apocalypse. Since cancelling our subscriptions and turning off the TV "news" we have never felt better. To be recommended.
ReplyDeleteThanks for pointing out the existence of this refreshing book. I will look out for it.
@Trev1 https://exislepublishing.com/product/this-is-us/
ReplyDeleteHow long before Exisle is reviled and hectored by the rabid Left of present NZ academia, society and media?
It's good to see you addressing the problem of Wokeism. I am so concerned about it here in NZ that I have started a website and video channel devoted to pushing back against it. I noted from your post on the stabbings that you share some concerns over media coverage of some of this stuff. I am not sure most people get what Wokeism really is.
ReplyDeleteWokeism is one of the most dangerous ideologies imaginable. It shares the same foundations as the very evilest ideologies of the 20th century.
https://rumble.com/vmcu7s-understanding-wokeism-communism-fascism-and-nazism.html
And it is a pick and mix from those ideologies:
https://www.markavis.org/2021/06/10/wokism_evil_ideology/
The video and essay linked to are both quite long, but only by seeing the detail will you understand the scale of the threat Wokeism poses. We are sleepwalking into a very bad place.