Jafa
Jafa is a slang term (sometimes pejorative) for a resident of Auckland, New Zealand.[1] It is the acronym for Just Another Fucking Aucklander. This prejudice against Aucklanders started to appear within the last four decades, and is considered to be representative of the boorishness of Aucklanders, or the envy of the rest of New Zealand, depending on the perspective. The term is also misspelled as Jaffa, a chocolate confection from Dunedin, and is often used in sentences which render the original term useless in the grammatical sense. The term has wider currency than the earlier derogatory term "Rangitoto Yank"[2] A variant is Jaffa for Just Another Fuckwit From Auckland.
Origins
The word Jafa often conveys dislike for Aucklanders. While only a small part of New Zealand geographically, Auckland makes up 32% of the population of New Zealand, by far the largest city, and has greater economic power (mainly through the centralisation of many companies) than its population share would indicate.
Other factors in the use of the word:
- Aucklanders themselves see JAFA as standing for 'Just another friendly Aucklander' or 'Just another fantastic Aucklander'.
- Auckland is alleged to dominate in national politics and society, a claim possibly somewhat overstated, as much of the political power is concentrated in Wellington, the country's capital. In terms of society recognition, Wellingtonians are also more than twice as likely to be selected to receive Commonwealth honours such as those on the New Year's Honour List.[3]
- Auckland is alleged to receive more than its fair share of government funds, though often in the past, as in 2005, it "received less than its share in terms of its proportion of total population",[4] and a report in 1991 showed that out of $150 million in fuel taxes, only $84 million had come back to the Auckland Region in transport investment.[5]
- Auckland is alleged to be a drain on the national economy. In fact, it is the main business centre in the country, but rural New Zealand produces the agricultural majority of the nation's exports. Auckland produces around 35 percent of New Zealand's GDP, however on a per-capita basis, it is fifth behind Taranaki, Wellington, Southland and Canterbury.[6]
- Auckland is alleged to dominate the National Provincial Championship in rugby union in the 1980s and 90s, when Auckland won the championship in 15 out of 30 years and never lost in a final, holding the prestigious Ranfurly Shield trophy for a record 61 successful defences over 8 years.
- Auckland is alleged to be full of rude, greedy and arrogant people, having a similar reputation as those of Mumbai and Kolkata in India or Milan and Rome in Italy or Moscow and St. Petersburg in Russia.
- Auckland is alleged to be full of cars and especially SUVs (often referred to by detractors as 'Remuera Tractors', with Remuera being the stereotypical 'rich people's suburb'), and its drivers preferring them to other types of transportation,[7] but Aucklanders use them less than the rural population.
- Auckland is alleged to be a culturally alien place due to the much higher proportion of non-Māori and nonwhite populations than the rest of the country. Percentage-wise, Auckland has the seventh largest ethnic Chinese population among all urban areas outside Greater China.[8] In the 2006 census, Asians comprised 18.9% of Auckland's population but only 7.9% in Christchurch, and 14.4% of Auckland's but merely 2.8% of Christchurch's population are Pacific Islanders. Most new immigrants to Auckland are from East Asia and South Asia, while people immigrating to other parts of the country show higher percentage rates of UK and South African origins.[9] Auckland is finding itself increasingly marginalised on sports traditionally identified with New Zealand culture, such as rugby and netball, because of high immigrant numbers from countries with little tradition of such sports.[10]
Location of prejudice
- Generally South Island, rural lower North Island, Northland, and increasingly in Wellington, where Auckland is perceived to take many of the national events supposedly belonging in the capital.
- The strength of prejudice generally increases farther south. It becomes openly noticeable south of Taupo, with it reaching peak intensity in Canterbury and other southern parts of New Zealand. A much published photograph taken in 1997 shows a young boy at a rugby match in Christchurch holding a sign reading simply, "I hate you Auckland".[11]
Use in Auckland
- In 1999 the Tourism Auckland organisation launched a "Jafa" advertising campaign.
- Aucklanders initially adopted the word ironically.
- The New Zealand Herald, the main Northern North Island (encompassing Northland, Greater Auckland, and Waikato) daily newspaper, now sometimes uses "Jafa" as a nickname for Aucklanders without any hint of irony.
- This use of "Jafa" amongst Aucklanders, as a positive, self-referential term, has led to the reinterpretation of the acronym by some to mean Just Another Fabulous Aucklander.
- In 2004, mayor Dick Hubbard launched a free JafaCab service for the Auckland CBD, by driving a cab down Queen St. The occupants were Nicky Watson and Santa.[12][13]
- From 2005 onwards, there have been some Aucklanders using this term with civic pride, as part of the general trend of rising self-confidence among the local residents identifying with the city.
- The term Jafa is also used in the name of an independent student owned film / media group, Jafa TV Productions, run by students of the University of Auckland and Auckland University of Technology. It describes itself as "an interactive hub where independent filmmakers network with other filmmakers freely and directly".[14]
Related words and sayings
- "New Zealand stops (or starts) at the Bombay Hills" – used by Aucklanders and non-Aucklanders alike
- "Jafaland", "J'land", "Jafastan" / "Jafastani" – Auckland / Aucklander
- "Queen Street Farmer" – Urban businessman with rural investments and supposedly little understanding of rural life
- "The Bridge" – referring to the Auckland Harbour Bridge, usually in connection with traffic issues
- "Rangitoto Yanks" – An old term which suggested a rude obnoxious American-styled person from Auckland. Was made more popular when Auckland's motorways and high-rises were first built.
Use in advertising
- Transit NZ has a road safety campaign on State Highway 2 using the term "JAFA" – "Just Another Fatigued Aucklander".
- Transit NZ also runs a similar road safety campaign running north from Hastings using the term "JAFA" as "Just Another Fatal Accident."
- On Tui beer billboards: "Let's go to Auckland for the holidays. Yeah, right."; "Aucklanders are people too. Yeah, right."; and "Auckland is a super city. Yeah, right." (the last being a reference to the proposed amalgamation of the Auckland Region's four cities into one "Super City"), "Auckland's super now. Yeah, right."
- Waikato Draught Billboard: "Aucklanders Heading South For The Summer, Our Seasonal Disaster", which was displayed in Huntly, in the Waikato Region. Hamilton Mayor Michael Redman publicly asked the advertising company to remove the billboard claiming that Hamiltonians don't feel that way about Aucklanders (and fear for tourism income).
- In the name of an Auckland taxi company, "Jafacabs"
Other uses
It has been claimed in one 2007 tourist article that in the United Kingdom, the term JAFA has also come to stand for Just Another Fucking Australian, apparently in reference to the hard drinking and allegedly arrogant behaviour of many travelling Australians.[15]
The acronym is also used, particularly by Australian Antarctic personnel, for Just Another Fucking Academic.[16]
See also
- Bombay Hills, New Zealand
- Helengrad (pejorative term for New Zealand's capital city (Wellington), referring to Helen Clark)
- Tall Poppy Syndrome (suggesting that the people of Auckland are merely the focus of envy)
- South Island nationalism
References
- ↑ "New Zealand Parliament – Volume 663, Week 44 – Thursday, 3 June 2010". parliament.nz. 2011. Retrieved 17 December 2011.
However, these people, along with 1.3 million others, will now be privileged to wear a T-shirt that says: “Proud to be a JAFA”, because something like one-third of the population of this country from 1 November will have the status of being a JAFA. I have been very happy to wear that label for a number of years, but of those 1.3 million I suspect that quite a number will come to realise that they are not.
- ↑ "Colloquialisms of a fruity Kiwi kind", 24 May 1998, The Independent
- ↑ Brian Rudman (17 January 2007). "Brian Rudman: It's obviously a high honour to be a Wellingtonian". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
- ↑ What You Should Know About Auckland – The New Zealand Herald, Tuesday 21 November 2006, Page D2
- ↑ "Brian Rudman: Rest of NZ owes Auckland big time for roads". The New Zealand Herald. 18 March 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
- ↑ "Regional Gross Domestic Product: Year ended March 2013". Statistics New Zealand. 28 March 2014. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
- ↑ "Climatologist puts heat on 4WDs". Television New Zealand. 22 March 2005.
- ↑ http://www.voxy.co.nz/politics/huo-will-continue-fight-asian-voice-auckland/5/24471
- ↑ Wardlow Friesen, Diverse Auckland: The Face of New Zealand in The 21st Century?, Asia New Zealand Foundation, 2006 http://www.asianz.org.nz/files/AsiaNZ%20Outlook%206.pdf
- ↑ Lincoln Tan (30 November 2009). "Migrants vital to future of sports". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
- ↑ Simon O'Rourke (8 October 2005). "Jafa-bashing banners ruled offside". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
- ↑ Stokes, Jon (9 December 2004). "Free Jafacabs just the ticket for city slickers". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
- ↑ "The Jafacab". Auckland Daily Photo. December 15, 2006. Retrieved 10 November 2012.
- ↑ Jafa TV (official website of the student film / media group)
- ↑ "In London, the Jafas are Australian". The New Zealand Herald. 29 March 2007. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
- ↑ The Antarctic Dictionary: A Complete Guide to Antarctic English (via Canberra Society of Editors Newsletter, Vol. 10, No. 10, November 2001)
External links
- Just Another Far-fetched Angle? (Article about the JAFA Advertising campaign) – The New Zealand Herald, Friday 13 August 1999, page unknown
- Jafas live longer and earn more (Example of the use of "Jafa" without irony) – The New Zealand Herald, Friday 8 October 2004, page unknown
- Hating Auckland | Kiwianarama (Satirical article exploring Kiwis love/hate relationship with Auckland.)