Ben Hana
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ben Hana prefers to be called Brother but is more widely known as Blanket Man as headlined by the local media. Brother is an infamous character in Wellington, New Zealand. Wearing only a loincloth and blanket and sporting dreadlocks, Hana worships the Māori sun god Ra [3] (not to be confused with the Egyptian Sun God of the same name).
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[edit] History
Ben Hana first arrived in Wellington from the East Coast in the summer of 2001 at which time he began living rough on the streets of the central city, notably Cuba Mall and Courtenay Place. Before Ben became a feature of Wellington, he lived in front of the court house in Tokoroa, and in fact caused controversy in the town when he was convicted of stealing and selling the Court house's copper guttering for scrap. He could frequently be seen in the streets dancing to the music of his ghetto blaster. Known for sitting or lying on traffic islands during his period of sun worship, there were calls for his removal from the street. In 2002 he was arrested for vagrancy and held in prison for seven weeks. Charges were eventually dropped, but he was later arrested again, this time for smoking a peace pipe in Cuba Mall. He was released on condition that he not return to the Mall, although how this was intended to be enforced was unclear. After his removal from the Mall he spent several weeks living with other vagrants on the base of the Wellington cenotaph. This abode was visible from the offices of many Members of Parliament, and before long New Zealand First leader Winston Peters complained about Hana's presence to police, saying that the vagrants were desecrating an important monument. They were subsequently moved on.
In mid 2004, Ben was spotted walking down Ponsonby Road in Auckland. By December 2005, the neighbouring businesses had employed security guards in order to keep Hana and his colleagues away from his normal abode in Courtenay Place. Although he used to wear a pair of khaki trousers, they rotted away into ripped shreds, and so he just retained a loincloth to satisfy the letter of the law. The only other item of clothing he's been seen to wear recently is a red t-shirt. In August 2006 his purple blanket was stolen and he has been donated a new blanket with red and white koru on. He developed a taste for Jelly tips in July 2006. He is also a fan of Fanta. Ben has been seen drinking a Bulleit brand Bourbon and Cola. Whether this is his favourite alcoholic beverage is unknown.
Contrary to popular belief, Ben does not have an iPod, just a small FM radio. When asked about and his taste in music, Ben's response was "Rock and I listen to a pirate station. I can listen to rock all day, and all night".[1]
[edit] Sociology
The existence of Ben and the surrounding debate has provoked several works that both question the existing information and attitudes, and deliver even more for digestion and comment:
- A Different Way of Life By Marcelina Mastalerz Interview with "Brother" (also known as "Blanket Man")[1] Media Studies, Victoria University, Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui.
- Perceiving homelessness in Wellington By Nyree Barrett[2] Media Studies, Victoria University, Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui.
- 'Te Whanau o Aotearoa' A New Zealand Documentary Film by Errol Wright and Abi King-Jones[3] The New Zealand Film Archive, Nga Kaitiaki O Nga Taonga Whitiahua.
- Fans of Ben Hana A website by Paul Moss An eclectic collection of related images, thoughts, charts, and links[4].
- Aunt Jemima Prophecy: Cobra Sign A fiction novel by Steve Kenya, loosely based on the life of Ben Hana. Set to be released in Autumn 2006. [4].
[edit] Te Whaka
In August 2005, Hana was also observed to be in possession of a motor vehicle apparently signaling that he had joined the property-owning classes. The vehicle was unregistered, and boasted no license plates after Hana forcibly removed them using a hammer still in its plastic wrapper. He then painted the words "Te Whaka" in large white letters where the number plates had previously been. After spending a few days illegally parked, the car was towed on 2005-08-05 and Hana was arrested. Te Whaka is probably translated as "the Waka", a reference to the historic Māori primary vehicle of transport, a canoe that was built in a range of sizes to suit the purpose intended; from personal transport up to very large fighting platforms for war, and even larger to sail the oceans for thousands of kilometres.
In September 2006, Hana appealed against a drunk-driving conviction, claiming the Toyota he was driving was not a car but a "waka".[5]
He addressed the court in person and said though others might call the Toyota a car, he called it a waka. High Court judge Jillian Mallon said despite his views the Toyota was legally a motor vehicle.
In appealing against the sentence, Hana's lawyer, Maxine Dixon, said he had reported for community work but it required the wearing of shoes and Hana had not worn shoes for seven years.
He was assessed as unsuitable for community work and has applied for a sentence review. The appeal was dismissed. He is a convicted criminal. (see above)
[edit] Media exposure - television, newspaper, film, web
- One group of fans dressed in his likeness for the 2006 Rugby Sevens, received national television coverage for their creativity.
- An article appeared in the Wellington Dominion Post Newspaper, about Ben Hana and his Wikipedia article, on 2006-03-04, titled Going Global: First Courtenay Place, now the world.
- Ben appeared on National Television News (TV3) at 6pm NZST on 2006-06-25 in an article about the issues facing homeless people in Wellington, New Zealand.
- In late 2005, coverage in the Dominion Post noted Hana among a group of vagrants who are causing considerable concern for retailers and shoppers in the Cuba Mall/Manners Mall district.
- Te Whānau O Aotearoa – Caretakers of The Land: 2003 documentary about Ben Hana.
- Fans of Ben Hana: tribute website
- Car a waka, claims 'Blanketman' in appeal .[5]
[edit] Art versus politics
Bill Gosden (film reviewer) said about Ben; "His project lends itself to art more readily than to politics. The picture of a pure, disinherited man whose very disconnection from the world that swirls around him is a critique of that world, is essentially a poetic one. What makes the picture compelling in this film is that it’s so grounded in the realities of life on the streets."[6]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Marcelina Mastalerz (2006-05-12). A Different Way of Life. Media Studies. Victoria University of Wellington.
- ^ Nyree Barrett (2006-05-12). Perceiving homelessness in Wellington. Media Studies. Victoria University of Wellington.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ a b EMILY WATT. "Car a waka, claims "Blanketman" in appeal", The Dominion Post, 2006-09-26.
- ^ Te Whānau O Aotearoa – Caretakers of The Land
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Te Whānau O Aotearoa – Caretakers of The Land: 2003 documentary about Ben Hana.
- Listener Article: Robert Jones, a homeless man who walked the streets of Wellington for two decades.
- A Wellington School of Medicine and Health Sciences - Study of Homelessness in Wellington PDF
- WCC COMMUNITY HEALTH AND RECREATION COMMITTEE - RESPONSE TO THE HOMELESS TASKFORCE REPORT PDF
- Website - Fans of Ben Hana