50 signatures reached
To: Merri-bek City Council
Change the name of Taranaki Ave in Brunswick
Change the name of Taranaki Avenue in Brunswick, and if Wurundjeri Traditional Owners would like to, change it to a Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung name under their leadership and guidance.
Why is this important?
My name is Te Raukura O'Connell Rapira and I whakapapa (have ancestral lineage and connection) to Taranaki through my Nan Kirikaa Moerewarewa Haddon. My iwi are Te Ātiawa and Ngāruahine, my marae is Owae in Waitara and my ancestral mountain is Taranaki.
After visiting CERES one day and being suprised there is a street called Taranaki Avenue in East Brunswick, I reached out to Brunswick Community History Group who told me there are seven Māori street names in the area: Taranaki, Akeroa, Waihi, Orari, Pareora, Timaru and Temuka. These streets were created as part of a post WWI soldier settlement project in 1921 and were named in recognition of the ANZACs. It is not known if any Aboriginal or Māori people were involved in this naming or decision-making, though it is doubtful.
According to Brunswick Community History Group, there are just three streets in Brunswick with First Nations names:
After visiting CERES one day and being suprised there is a street called Taranaki Avenue in East Brunswick, I reached out to Brunswick Community History Group who told me there are seven Māori street names in the area: Taranaki, Akeroa, Waihi, Orari, Pareora, Timaru and Temuka. These streets were created as part of a post WWI soldier settlement project in 1921 and were named in recognition of the ANZACs. It is not known if any Aboriginal or Māori people were involved in this naming or decision-making, though it is doubtful.
According to Brunswick Community History Group, there are just three streets in Brunswick with First Nations names:
- Merri Street - named after the Merri Creek and the Wurundjeri word meaning 'rocky'
- Wyuna Street - named in 1883 after an irrigation settlement in northern Victoria and derived from a First Nations word
- Yarrabin Street - named in the 1940s and thought to be derived from a First Nations word - language not identified - meaning 'white eucalyptus tree'.
After consulting with the Wurundjeri Land Council and people I love and respect back home in Taranaki, I am petitioning the Merri-bek Council to have the street name Taranaki Avenue removed and - if Wurundjeri Traditional Owners want to - replace it with a Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung word. I do not have the whakapapa or authority to speak on any of the other six Māori street names but welcome collaboration from any Māori whose tūpuna (ancestors) names are being used on these streets of Brunswick without our involvement.
When I consulted with Wurundjeri Land Council, they told me it would be lovely to have a cross-cultural ceremony between Māori and Aboriginal people for the name change if we get to that place. They also told me that it was them who received the racist backlash when Moreland Council changed its name to Merri-bek Council despite it not being an initiative started by Wurundjeri folk but a well-meaning settler like me. I want to avoid this racist backlash by gathering as many petition signatures as possible from people that live in the Merri-bek council area and in particular the people that live on Taranaki Avenue whose street I will be door-knocking.
I stand in the Taranaki lineage of Parihaka which is a legacy of nonviolence, peace and conscientious objection to war. Many Indigenous people fought alongside the ANZACs under the coerced promise that would elevate our people's standing in colonial society and support the generation's long work towards land return and justice. Promises by colonial governments were broken in Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia. Families were broken and we still feel the impact of this injustice today. I support the Yoorrook Justice Commission's recommendation for redress for all First Peoples impacted by these broken promises.
How it will be delivered
I will deliver this petition to the Merri-bek City Council personally once we gather a decent number of signatures