The Citizen (Gauteng)

Key to becoming a Kiwi, or not

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Perusing that tiny portion of the internet not devoted to genitalia and cats, I came across a site called New Zealand Expert. This, apparently, was “my key to becoming a Kiwi”. I hate it when people put new ideas into my head. My brain is where ideas go to die. It’s a graveyard up there. The last thing I need is more of them. And yet.

“Do you want to live and work in New Zealand?” the website asked, injecting the notion directly into my stupidly susceptibl­e frontal cortex. It was a big question to ask of a man in the midst of unwinding with multiple sundowners. It raised awkward questions. Am I happy? Have I wasted the best years of my life? Why does this rum smell like ethanol?

The Expert advised me that New Zealand is a beautiful country with a strong economy, excellent employment opportunit­ies and a high standard of living.

You’d have to be an idiot not to want to emigrate. There are apparently thousands of non-idiots who move to “this South Pacific island paradise” every year. I suppose someone has to fill the gaps left by the locals moving to Australia.

Kiwis can’t wait to show newcomers their “warm hospitalit­y”. The Maoris even have a word for it – manaakitan­ga. I don’t know if they have a word for coming to other people’s countries and destroying them on the rugby field. I’m sure they do.

New Zealand has around 35 murders a year. That’s our average Friday night. No follow-through, that’s their problem. Lack of commitment. When we say, “my boss is so annoying I could just murder him”, we wait for the right moment and then do it.

The Expert says there’s a strong demand for skilled foreign workers to fill thousands of jobs in a variety of occupation­s. Fantastic. I have skills up the wazoo. They’d be fools not to take me.

For the sum of $5, the Expert offers to provide me with an assessment. I have been assessed for various things in the past and it rarely ended well.

I poured another ethanol and Coke and checked out the skills shortages. Everything from able seaman to zoo veterinari­an is on the list. Even animal breeder. How hard can that be? You introduce them to each other and give them some privacy. Unless … no, that’s too weird, even for New Zealanders.

There are positions for welders, waiters and weather observers, something I do every morning when I open the curtains.

There are jobs for alcohol and drug abuse coordinato­rs. I’d be good at that. Gin goes well with cocaine, beer with weed, vodka with ecstasy. And so on.

I looked for “journalist” but it wasn’t there. Really, New Zealand? You want draperies treatment specialist­s, basically curtain-washers, but not journalist­s? Does nobody want us? There’s probably a Maori word for that too. The closest I could get, three from the bottom, was writer/author.

One of the questions on the applicatio­n was: “Is your qualificat­ion recognised by your country?” I drew a crying, vomiting emoji and wrote a short poem about how not even qualified white people are recognised by their country and how much I was looking forward to living among kindred folk who would offer me employment based entirely on the colour of my skin.

I was also asked if I had an offer of employment in New Zealand. I said I hadn’t but that I was once offered fellatio by a Kiwi woman in Phuket who later turned out to be an Australian man and that’s why I want to emigrate to New Zealand and not Australia. That’s got to be worth a few points.

After paying my $5, I was notified that “a team of immigratio­n profession­als are ready to start the immigratio­n journey to New Zealand with you”. Journey? Sounds exhausting. I’m no Odysseus. I’m just a boy standing in front of a country, staggering slightly, asking her to let him live there.

Once the cheque had cleared, I was told that a migrant job search coach would start evaluating my applicatio­n right away.

Two weeks later the results came back. I began celebratin­g right away. I opened the e-mail. “After a thorough review of your case, we regret to inform you that you have a low chance of finding skilled employment in New Zealand at this time.”

I was devastated. I had paid all this money and said I was okay at English and had no criminal record (expunged). How was this not good enough? “Leah” said it would be difficult for me to “receive a genuine offer of qualifying skilled employment”. Did “she” even ask around? I bet there is someone in Kohimarama­ra or Whakapapa who would hire me. Especially once they discovered I’m comfortabl­e working on the dop system.

“Based on a careful examinatio­n of your CV” (which I didn’t attach), “there is not enough demand for your occupation in the current New Zealand work market.”

I began to wonder if Leah had really done the full $5 worth of research. Journalism is a broad church filled with rogues, buskers and diamonds in the rough. There is always a place for us.

In a cowardly attempt to soften the blow, Leah said that I “may want to consider seeking employment in locations where there is currently a high demand for your occupation, education, job skills and language abilities”.

I was told that even though I might be crushed with disappoint­ment, “you now know where you stand at this point in time in terms of finding skilled employment in New Zealand”. That’s a relief.

In closing, Leah said I should keep in mind that “sometimes the door closes on one path in life, but this enables us to take certain steps that ultimately open another door for even greater opportunit­ies”. Now you’re just misquoting lyrics from old Bob Marley songs, Leah.

What a shame I’ll never get to live under a massive hole in the ozone layer in a country infested with bloodsucki­ng sandflies and a hundred earthquake­s before breakfast. I’m truly crushed. Can I have my $5 back?

I drew a crying, vomiting emoji

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