It was a rare national meeting that was expected to attract 3,000 attenders. Instead, 10,000 were there, M?ori leaders and their families pouring into T?rangawaewae – the seat of the M?ori King – in a mighty display of unity against New Zealand government policies that risk unwinding decades of progress for M?ori rights and wellbeing. “There was a massive feeling of solidarity,” says Te Rawhitiroa Bosch, a photographer, affiliated with the Northland iwi [tribe] Ng?puhi and Ng?ti Kahu, of Saturday’s gathering. “When you turn up and there are 10,000 people there and it takes half an hour to find a...