Some might say the criminals who appear in tonight's Maori Television documentary about restorative justice don't deserve the chance to apologise or be forgiven. After all, one stabbed his brother-in-law, one beat up his uncle, one ran over a three-year-old, one robbed a dairy and another broke a man's jaw. But this rap sheet isn't the whole story; and when more than half of prisoners reoffend within two years of release, perhaps jail isn't the whole answer.
As powerful as it is timely, Restoring Hope: An Indigenous Response to Justice examines a Maori approach to restorative justice. Contracted by the Ministry of Justice, the Manukau Urban Maori Authority (MUMA) arranges voluntary conferences in Auckland that bring together the offenders and the victims of crimes ranging from shoplifting to murder. (When a victim has died, the family attends.)
"In its simplest form, restorative justice is a conversation between the victim of a crime and the offender," says MUMA's restorative-justice manager Mike Hinton (Ngati Raukawa).
The witty, salt-of-the-earth former military man with the tattooed forearms is the right man both for the job and to front the doco. A faceless narrator would have felt intrusive, whereas Hinton's voiceover works well.