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Invasion Day or Australia Day?

The Central Desert of Australia with the MacDonnell ranges running through the background

The Central Desert of Australia with the MacDonnell ranges running through the background

Long before the debate between calling 26 January Invasion Day or Australia Day began, the concept of celebrating the destruction of Australia’s indigenous culture sat very uneasily with me. At school we learnt that the Aboriginals in New South Wales were virtually wiped out within years of white men landing on Australian shores. This wholesale destruction wrought disease during a futile attempt to defend their land, lives and culture.

Each year I thought more and more about the Aboriginal inhabitants of Australia, past and present, and I felt increasingly confident to say it was not OK to celebrate Australia Day without acknowledging them and their experience of violence, deaths in custody, racism, neglect and genocidal destruction of their land and culture at the hands of many over our 233 year occupancy.

As recent example of this last year a Rio Tinto, a French owned company demolished the Juukan Gorge caves in the Pilbara region, Western Australian, caves housing some of the world’s oldest and most important rock art in the world. For iron ore. In direct contravention of the traditional owners wishes. UNESCO experts compared the destruction of this important historical site to the destruction of Palmyra by ISIS.

The Aboriginals still suffer a great deal of racism, even this week I was told by an Australian that the products I make with them might struggle to sell in Australia as they are by Aboriginal artists. The fact that much of Australia celebrates by drinking themselves into an alcoholic stupor while deriding the Aboriginals for drinking the introduced substance leaves a taste of bitter irony in my mouth. And not just mine but many people who stand with the Aboriginals on this day of mourning for their losses.

Australia is made of up immigrants from every war waged since the occupation of Australia. This is something the Country should be proud of, something that should be celebrated. Australia has provided a safe haven for many desperately displaced people from all over the world including Italians, Greeks, Lebanese, Vietnamese, Chinese (the Uighurs more recently), Cambodians, Sri Lankans, South Africans, Zimbabweans, Somalians and Eritreans.

Perhaps we can find a day to celebrate this achievement rather than the yearly juxtaposition of pain and loss alongside a celebration of a devastatingly destructive invasion?

And perhaps Australia can finally reconcile itself that it is time to accept and celebrate it’s original owners: the Aboriginals of Australia.

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Black Lives Matter

Geraldine Napangardi Granites, Snake Vine Dreaming

Geraldine Napangardi Granites, Snake Vine Dreaming

It hardly bares thinking Black Lives Matter even has to be stated.

In Australia our indigenous population have endured, and continue to endure widespread racism, discrimination, segregation and brutality. In November last year a young Walpiri man, Kumanjayi Walker, was shot in Yuendumu for breaches of his suspended sentence. He subsequently died while in police custody with a Northern Territory police officer later being charged with his murder. Kumanjayi is from a community represented through our art gallery.

Shocking, avoidable and in no way justifiable.

Reconciliation Week in Australian ends tomorrow so let’s hope people reflect on the events in America and at home by moving forward in a positive manner whereby it’s accepted all have equal human rights.

In the UK we see young black men ripping into each other with knives and increasingly using guns to inflict revenge in their postcode wars. So much was taken away from our young, particularly our black youths, during austerity. If Black Lives Matter(ed) to those in power community centres would reopen and youth programmes reinstated. Police funding could go towards supporting the young rather than installing multiple cameras on every street corner.

Black Lives Matter. Stop the Killing.