Former Black Power president Phil Paikea is sharing how he "flipped the script" on his violent path. Photo / Michael Craig
“I was a victim and I became a perpetrator,” former Black Power president Phil Paikea says.
The Ruakākā-based SafeMan SafeFamily lead facilitator learned quickly as a young boy to suppress his tears.
“A lot of my friends got the bash with a jandal or a wooden spoon. I wish that was us,” he said.
“We got the bash with the hoover’s metal hose or the kettle cord that would leave marks, and if we showed emotion or we’d cry, Dad would say, ‘I’ll give you something to cry about’.”
Because Paikea didn’t want to be hit anymore, he “crushed” that emotion and learned to “cry on the inside” instead.
He is speaking out as a changed man ahead of White Ribbon Day on Friday, November 25. This year’s campaign centres on promoting healthy masculinity and challenging stereotypical gender roles.
White Ribbon says research showed the expectations of men to always appear dominant, tough, and in charge contributed to the underlying causes of family violence.
Police carry out roughly 30 family harm investigations a day in Northland, with experts describing reported incidents as merely the tip of the iceberg.
“Believing in the rigid rules of masculinity is 20 times more likely to predict committing violence than any other demographic features,” White Ribbon manager Rob McCann said.
“Those are astonishing, awful numbers, and it’s why we need to ensure the next generation are not indoctrinated into that unhealthy way of thinking.”
Paikea said he only learned what toxic masculinity was after committing to change.
“I looked it up and thought, ‘Woah, that describes me’.”
Boys don’t cry. Tick. Boys don’t do women’s work. Tick. Boys play with trucks, not dolls. Tick. Boys don’t show weakness. Tick.
Dr David Codyre, a psychiatrist and a SafeMan SafeFamily trustee, said these social contexts were one of two levels feeding family violence and unhealthy male and female relationships.
Modern media, film, music, and social media partly contributed to unhealthy attitudes toward women, he said.
“But I also think the other dimension to it is that - particularly in our early lives - our attitudes, beliefs, and how we grow up are very much shaped by the kind of environment we grow up in.”
Codyre said SafeMan SafeFamily founder and trustee Vic Tamati summed it up best.
“[...] he said, ‘If you only ever know what you’ve ever known, then you always do what you’ve always done, and then you’ll get what you’ve always got’.”
If all you’ve grown up knowing is violence, that becomes your norm, Codyre said.
But Paikea was able to “flip the script”. He saved his marriage of 44 years to wife Rowena and became a role model to his son and six daughters.
“I’m that man that can get emotional, and now I can openly weep,” he said.
Paikea now works to help other men live violence-free. He focuses on three things - knowledge, comprehension, and wisdom.
“You could have all the knowledge of family violence, but unless you apply wisdom - the application of knowledge and understanding - then changing what you’ve learned will never happen.”
Keeping families connected played an important role in keeping out violence, Paikea said.
Codyre said people with lived experience of family violence were doing a lot of work that went beyond 12-week court-ordered programmes to generate change.
“You can’t, in 12 weeks, change a lifetime’s conditioning,” he said.
“They’re working to support them to actually show there’s a better way to be, and to understand why I am the way I am.”