ZORAN RAKOVIC: The Altar of Atonement: How New Zealanders Came to Worship Their Own Submission
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- 10 hours ago
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New Zealanders increasingly shoulder Treaty burdens not theirs to carry—learning Māori rites, obeying Crown guilt, and performing cultural submission. Here’s why.
In no other Western democracy does the ordinary citizen so enthusiastically offer themselves as a sacrificial vessel for the errors of their rulers. In no other civil society are people so eager to drape themselves in guilt not their own, speak in a borrowed tongue they do not understand, and recite protocols they do not believe—just to win the favour of cultural gatekeepers they neither elected nor dared challenge. In modern New Zealand, this is not called confusion. It is called reconciliation. And it is strangling the “republic of reason”.
This is not an attack on Māori culture, nor on the dignity of language or custom. It is an inquiry—psychological and political—into the strange enthusiasm with which ordinary New Zealanders, whose ancestors may have had no involvement in colonial conquest, have come to shoulder burdens that were never meant for them. They not only accept this weight—they seem to beg for it. They learn ceremonial incantations with a reverence usually reserved for the sacred. They stumble through vowels like penitents, convinced that the struggle to pronounce them is a moral good in itself. They invite themselves to be judged by tikanga they do not understand and will never be allowed to interpret. All of this, in the name of progress. All of this, in the name of unity.
But beneath this performance lies something deeper. Something older. Something broken.
Let us start where psychology demands we start: with the self. Leon Festinger, whose theory of cognitive dissonance transformed social science, would immediately recognise what is happening. The average New Zealander believes they are good, fair-minded, and kind. And yet, they are told constantly that they live on stolen land, speak a colonial language, and benefit daily from the suppression of an indigenous people. This contradiction is unbearable. It creates a psychic tension that must be resolved—not with critical thinking, but with compensatory behaviour.
So, they compensate. They sprinkle their speech with Māori words, not out of fluency but as offerings. They attend pōwhiri and pretend to understand its form. They sit on plastic chairs in air-conditioned government buildings and bow their heads solemnly as karakia are recited before reports on bus routes and waste disposal. The absurdity of the context is ignored, because the ritual is not about meaning—it is about atonement. Every mispronounced “kia ora” is an apology. Every silent moment of reverence at a public hui is a plea: Please don’t judge me for history. I am one of the good ones.
Albert Bandura might see this as moral disengagement in reverse. Whereas moral disengagement allows people to commit harm without guilt, what we see now is self-punishment without guilt. Citizens have internalised the sins of the state so completely that they pre-emptively abase themselves before any accusation is even made. They are not just disengaging from moral responsibility—they are inventing it.
It is tempting to see this as mere virtue signalling. But that phrase, while accurate, is too casual. This is something more pervasive: a psychological restructuring of identity around perpetual apology. John Jost’s system justification theory offers a powerful lens here. Jost argued that people tend to justify and even protect systems that oppress them, because the chaos of rebellion is more frightening than the familiarity of subjugation. In New Zealand, citizens protect the ideological system that burdens them with cultural obligations not their own, because the alternative—standing up and saying “this is not my guilt to carry”—would isolate them from polite society. They would be called racist. Or coloniser. Or worse: ignorant.
And so, they consent. They normalise. They absorb the new rites with grim enthusiasm. They pretend that te reo Māori is a “normal” national language, despite the fact that less than 5% of the population can hold a conversation in it. They claim that learning tikanga is a requirement of citizenship, even though citizenship has never been legally or morally conditional on religious or cultural compliance. They act as if tribal customs, however worthy in their own context, now supersede the democratic rituals of Parliament, the courts, or even the nuclear family. And they pass this down to their children, with books about taniwha and curriculum units on welcoming protocols, while Latin, calculus, and Shakespeare quietly disappear.
Erich Fromm’s Escape from Freedom is again helpful. Fromm saw that modern man, overwhelmed by the burden of choice, would rather surrender to systems of external authority than face the terror of individual moral agency. In today’s New Zealand, the citizen surrenders not to the law, but to the priesthood of cultural intermediaries. These are not elected officials. They are not bound by legal codes or public accountability. They are self-appointed arbiters of what is sacred and what is offensive. And citizens, stripped of confidence and desperate for absolution, kneel before them.
This psychological surrender is bolstered by what Hannah Arendt called the banality of evil—not because what is happening is evil in the genocidal sense, but because the mechanisms are so mundane, so bureaucratic, so ordinary. There is no mass coercion. There are no punishments. Instead, there is the quiet shame of nonconformity. The anxious glance when one fails to start a meeting with a “kia ora.” The HR module that insists on cultural competency. The schoolteacher who raises an eyebrow at the parent questioning the value of karakia in maths class. The citizen obeys, not because they believe, but because belief is now irrelevant. Compliance is the new virtue.
And let us not forget Jonathan Haidt’s insights into moral intuition and group loyalty. Haidt has shown that people make moral judgments not through reason, but through gut instinct shaped by tribe. In New Zealand, the new tribe is the culture of appeasement. Its badge is bilingual signage. Its rituals are Treaty workshops. Its heresies are doubt and dissent. The citizen does not want to think. They want to belong. And if that means treating Māori grievance as untouchable truth and Crown authority as sacred guilt, then so be it.
But there is a deeper tragedy in all this. The cost is not only borne by those who dissent. It is borne by the entire citizenry, who are denied the right to speak as equals—not because someone silences them, but because they silence themselves. When obligations that rightly belong to the Crown are redistributed, socially and financially, onto private individuals and businesses, and no one objects, we no longer live in a liberal democracy. We live in a moral monarchy. A place where one part of society makes the rules, and the rest of society begs for forgiveness.
This redistribution is not metaphorical. It is embedded in local government planning, where iwi consultation must be undertaken not by the Crown, but by the ratepayer. It is found in education, where Māori epistemology is presented not as one knowledge system among many, but as sacred truth. It is found in law and medicine, where cultural considerations override evidence, and where failure to understand tribal expectations becomes a professional liability. These are not expressions of biculturalism. They are acts of bureaucratic displacement—where the Crown shrugs off its historic responsibilities and says to the public: you carry this now.
And they do. Willingly. Gratefully. They attend training courses. They rewrite mission statements. They let their children be taught that their identity is problematic and that their silence is complicity. All in the hope that by doing so, they will not be accused. They will be accepted. They will be spared.
But the cruelty of this pact is that it can never be fulfilled. The shame does not diminish. The obligations do not reduce. The expectations only grow. Because the more one proves loyalty, the more one must keep proving it. The performative must become perpetual.
What is needed now is not defiance, but clarity. Citizens must recover the ability to distinguish between respect and self-erasure. Between cultural inclusion and ideological submission. Between historical accountability and personal guilt. The Treaty may impose duties upon the Crown—but it does not impose them upon every individual who happens to be born here. One can honour history without inheriting its sins. One can affirm Māori dignity without abandoning civic equality.
And one can, finally, speak clearly: that the modern trend of cultural self-flagellation is not justice—it is neurosis. It is the psychological aftershock of a nation that has lost confidence in itself. A nation that no longer knows where governance ends and guilt begins.
Today’s New Zealanders are not obliged to carry the Crown’s burdens of 1840. They are not required to become fluent in a language they did not grow up with. They are not morally bound to adopt the customs of a tribe to which they do not belong. They are, however, responsible for creating a society where everyone’s dignity is protected by law, not performance.
That task requires courage. It requires reason. And it requires shedding the false virtue of inherited shame.
The Crown must carry its own weight.
The citizen must rise from the altar.
With the twenty-second century at our doorstep, this society must reclaim itself now—or lose itself entirely.
Zoran Rakovic is a structural engineer with nearly 30 years of experience, who has helped design and strengthen buildings across New Zealand. His substack is HERE