Indigenous Australians Prepare for a Grand Australia Day Celebration

Indigenous Australians Prepare for a Grand Australia Day Celebration


The Australia Letter ⁢is a weekly newsletter from our​ Australia bureau. Subscribe ⁤to receive‍ it via email. This week’s ⁣edition‌ is penned ⁣by Julia Bergin, a journalist ‍based in the Northern Territory.

Parades, Union ⁢Jack themed barbecues, angry protests, ⁤and reflective vigils —‍ it’s 2024, and Jan. 26 in Australia remains a day that ‌inspires many ⁢different reactions across the nation.

Formally‍ Australia Day but also ​known as Invasion Day or Survival Day, the date marks the violent ‍arrival of British settlers to the continent in 1788, and​ it has a long history as a political flashpoint for Indigenous affairs.

This year, a First Nations advocacy group in Darwin decided to go bigger — with a hybrid protest for Indigenous Australians, Palestinians⁢ and the people of West Papua, which⁤ was annexed by Indonesia decades ago, leading to ​a ⁤prolonged conflict.

“Yes, Invasion Day is the⁣ reason why we’re ​all here today, but we must go beyond that,” said Mililma⁤ May, who runs the group, a nonprofit called Uprising‌ of the People.

Ms. May, a Kulumbirigin Danggalaba Tiwi woman, said that what was needed for‌ all groups ​were ⁤practical and⁤ tangible ways to understand ⁢colonialism. By bringing ⁣separate protest movements ⁤together with a common goal “to demand land back,” she said she⁣ hoped Jan.‌ 26 would unify oppressed groups and appeal to a broader cross-section of Australians.

It’s ⁢also an effort meant to bring attention back to unresolved issues.

In the months after⁢ the failure of ‍the Indigenous Voice to Parliament‍ referendum⁤ — devised ​to enshrine an Indigenous advisory group in the Australian Constitution — First ⁣Nations issues have dropped off the ⁤mainstream news agenda and slid down the government’s to-do list.

William Tilmouth, an Arrernte man and a founder of Children’s ‍Ground, a First Nations education organization, said the conversation about Indigenous rights had died down post referendum, making the subject even ​harder‍ to‍ broach for ⁢First⁣ Nations people.

“We’re 20‌ meters behind the starting gun,” he said.⁤ “We start from the ‍back and have to ‍run harder just to get up.”

Historically, Jan. 26 has served as a source of momentum for First Nation’s rights, Mr. Tilmouth said, but⁣ the referendum’s⁢ failure had handicapped Indigenous people this⁢ year.

“It’s not‍ talked about much,” he said.

Yet the holiday remains politically contentious. In the weeks leading⁣ up to Jan. 26, supporters of Australia Day celebrations took ‌to social media to drum up nationalist sentiment, for example, condemning big business for ⁣“anti-Australian” marketing decisions, such as supermarket chains reducing holiday merchandise. (The supermarkets have attributed the reduction to⁣ declining demand.)

Mr. Tilmouth ⁣maintains that⁣ Jan. ‍26​ is a day that⁣ could and should be leveraged​ to ⁣promote justice and reconciliation, respect and recognition, ⁣rather than a day of celebration. Such values, he said, had application beyond Australia, with ‌racism and oppression —…

2024-01-25 ⁤21:28:32
Post from www.nytimes.com

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