Skip to main content
The Weekly Standard
ABOUT USSUBSCRIBEHOME

Click here to read the full text of this article in the The Weekly Standard Digital Archive

Under the Southern Cross

Under the Southern Cross The other morning, I climbed a volcano. Just a little one, that rejoices in the comic-opera name of Rangitoto and sits on an island of its own near New Zealand's Auckland...

...Some things have changed...
...This time, I noticed New Zealand's lively democracy...
...An economy once dependent on the sale of wool to Britain now features growing and diversified trade oriented to Australia and Asia...
...Kapiti, like Rangitoto, is uninhabited, a wildlife refuge...
...The day we arrived, a power outage began that left Auckland embarrassingly without electricity for weeks, and pundits argued over whether too much privatization or too little were to blame...
...Claudia Winkler...
...The luxuriance of the fuchsias and hydrangeas, introduced from Europe, matches the magic of the tree ferns and red pohutukawas...
...They look out over the Tasman Sea toward Australia (1,200 miles away), with off to the right the mysterious, beautiful profile of Kapiti Island...
...Prime Minister Jenny Shipley also made the front pages, with the "Code of Social and Family Responsibility" she mailed to every household...
...New Zealand's only creatures were birds, insects, and lizards until the ninth century...
...The first country to grant women the vote (in 1893), it also had an early welfare state—and a bold retreat from sta-tism, with radical marketization starting in 1984...
...Also unfamiliar is the heightened Maori-consciousness...
...At our old school in Lower Hutt, the principal (under the gender-neutral regime, no longer a "headmaster") explained the new nationwide system of open enrollment and school-based management...
...Must return...
...My newfound old friend Trisha, who works for a member of Parliament, ends her e-mails, "Must away...
...An elected parent and community board, including the principal and a staff representative, drafts each school's goals, manages its budget, and hires its employees, even the principal and teachers...
...Columnists sparred: This was a pious waste of time, a sly prelude to further welfare cuts, or an honorable attempt to raise vital issues...
...Schools endowed with wise and energetic volunteers have come into their own...
...But we found out her name and history: She was a steel-hulled sailing ship called the Hyderabad (pronounced "Hodge-a-bed" by the Kiwi assistant at the Maritime Museum), and her skipper ran her onto the beach in 1878 to escape a hurricane...
...Today, a population of 3.5 million—predominantly Anglo, 13 percent Maori—is spread across an area the size of Colorado...
...But Trisha and her family live outside Wellington on a cliff 600 feet above Pukerua Bay...
...As America's Cup aficionados know, Auckland is a mariner's dream of bays and sheltering peninsulas, littered with far-flung islands, and from the summit of Rangitoto the 360 degree panorama—all teal and green sea, flecked with sails and framed in the distance by graciously rounded stretches of land, wooded or urban —leaves the visitor amazed...
...Kia ora...
...She wants to spark a national conversation about family breakdown, child neglect, and the dole...
...Only Maoris witnessed that last eruption...
...I can report that Huka Falls is, as remembered, turquoise...
...My family lived there in the late 1950s...
...New Zealand is a middle-class country...
...Captain Cook claimed it for England in 1769, but European settlement, mainly from the British Isles, was a 19th and 20th-century phenomenon...
...we left when I was nearly 12...
...Just a little one, that rejoices in the comic-opera name of Rangitoto and sits on an island of its own near New Zealand's Auckland harbor...
...The Dutchman Abel Tasman sailed down the west coast in 1642 and gave the country the name we know it by ("old" Zeeland is a Dutch province...
...Hokey pokey" is still the best ice cream in the world...
...The sea was too rough for a crossing the day we were to hike there...
...Little is known of its first people, and hundreds more years passed before the "great migration" brought the Maoris—Polynesians, in ocean-going canoes—to the place they called Aotearoa, Land of the Long White Cloud...
...That excursion will have to wait...
...When opposition leader Helen Clark pointed out that Shipley's own "privileged" teenagers are safely stashed at boarding school, the PM told her to "stop being catty...
...Friends who were children are middle-aged, attended by spouses and grown offspring, battered and buoyed by the decades...
...The roads are excellent...
...Its houses typically nestle behind hedges or stucco walls, in gardens at once gaudy and trim...
...Only half their view— a mere 180 degrees—is ocean...
...From the rim, the crater below looks like an enormous bowl lined with treetops...
...The wrecked ship we used to climb on at Waitarere beach is two-thirds buried in the sand...
...Like New Zealand itself, this mountain is young and manages to be simultaneously modest and exotic...
...I have just made a sentimental journey to New Zealand...
...Geologists say that Rangitoto heaved up out of the water around 1300 and was active two centuries ago...
...A sketch by a European from the 1880s shows no vegetation, but now the slopes are covered with bush...
...On the door of a roadside Italian restaurant outside Wanganui, a sign says "Bicul-turalism Builds Bridges...
...There are wineries, and restaurants befitting a tourist destination...

Vol. 3 • March 1998 • No. 26


Copyright ©2004, The Weekly Standard. All rights reserved.
Unauthorized redistribution is prohibited.
 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.