This 'sorry day' is just another one of methods used to try to pacify Black people, while continuing damaging attitudes and policies. It should be clear that they really are not sorry for continued oppression and exploitation of the indigenous people. After centuries of genocidal practises, the best the Australian government could come up with is a 'sorry day', while the Prime Minister John Howard refuses to apologise. Insulting sham!!!
Excerpts and links that deal with the Australian Aboriginal Experience"Ever since the invasion of our country by English soldiers and then colonists in the late eighteenth century, Aborigines have endured a history of land theft, attempted racial extermination, oppression, denial of basic human rights, actual and de facto slavery, ridicule, denigration, inequality and paternalism. Concurrently, we suffered the destruction of our entire way of life--spiritual , emotional, social and economic. The result is the Aboriginal of twentieth century Australia--a man without hope or happiness, without a land, without an identity, a culture or a future."
-Kevin Gilbert
http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/australia-bib.html"We have taken away their land, have destroyed their food, made them subject to our laws, which are antagonistic to their habits and traditions, have endeavored to make them subject to our tastes, which they hate, have massacred them when they defended themselves and their possessions after their own fashion, and have taught them by hard warfare to acknowledge us to be their master."
English novelist Anthony Trollope,
in the late 1800s, after visiting Australia
STOLEN CHILDRENThis story's right, this story's true
I would not tell lies to you
Like the promises they did not keep
And how they fenced us in like sheep
Said to us come take our hand
Sent us off to mission land
Taught us to read, to write and pray
Then they took the children away.
Took the children away,
The Children away
Snatched from their mother's breast
Said it was for the best
Took them away
From Aborigine singer Archie Roach's song, "Took the Children Away""The loss, grief and trauma experienced by Aboriginal people as a result of the separation laws, policies and practices can never be adequately compensated. The loss of the love and affection of children and parents can not be compensated. The psychological, physical and sexual abuse of children, isolated among adults who viewed them as members of a 'despised race' cannot be adequately compensated. The trauma resulting from these events have produced life-long effects, not only for the survivors, but for their children and their children's children." -
Link-Up, an organization which helps victims of the government's removal policies"I never saw my mother's face. I don't speak my mother's tongue...Police, clergy, anyone with a social standing had the legal right to come into a home, to decide that the children were neglected and to take them. It was genocide, just genocide." --
Julie Wilson, one of those now known as the "stolen generation""We can conclude with confidence that between one in three and one in ten indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families and communities in the period from approximately 1910 until 1970." -
From the 1997 National Inquiry reportSource:
Injustice Down UnderWriters like Aboriginal poet Jack Davis have described the pain of centuries with deep clarity.
You propped me up with Christ, red tape,
Tobacco, grog and fears.
Then disease and lordly rape
Throughout the brutish years.
Now you primly say you’re justified
And sing of a nation’s glory,
But I think of a people crucified -
The real Australian story.
Giant Jigsaw Puzzle
Echoes of history
HEROIC RESISTANCE: THE BLACK PRESENCE IN AUSTRALIA
Australia: Palm Island’s Dark History
Of Aboriginal RepressionRabbit-Proof Fence