Jacinta Price under fire from Aboriginal women
Alice Springs town councillor Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has been at the receiving end of community criticism from groups in Alice Springs recently. Last week a petition was circulated on social media to protest against mainstream media’s representation of Ms Price as a community leader.
Horses can help facilitate wellbeing for Aboriginal peoples
In the final report of last year’s Royal Commission into the Detention and protection into children in the Northern Territory, it stated that 75% of Aboriginal youth in detention have one or more diagnosable psychiatric disorders. This statistic is heart breaking to read.
We must listen to Indigenous voices. Social media is a good place to start
January is increasingly becoming a time for fierce debate about Indigenous identities and Australian nationhood. And each year the debate is gathering more attention. Indigenous voices, especially on social media, are getting louder.
It’s convenient to say Aboriginal people support Australia Day. But it’s not true
Opponents to Australia Day are invariably criticised in two ways. The first is a favoured manoeuvre for establishment media pundits: claim the focus on 26 January is trivial while more pressing Indigenous issues are neglected.
Australia Day – 230 years of grand theft and trespass
On 26 January, 1788 the British Crown contravened its own law – and prevailing international law– by laying claim to 7.692 million km² of land that was already inhabited and cared for by over 200 First Nations, each with a sophisticated and ecologically-focussed system of governance. And the trespass continues.
Why celebrate on the day that marks crimes of colonialism and genocide?
Aboriginal Peoples and Nations are subjects in international law: always was and always will be. We have held our relationship to country from time immemorial and we are still here today. We survive under the duress of an ongoing colonialism, but we continue to maintain our relationships with land and peoples to this day.
Abolish Australia Day – changing the date only seeks to further entrench Australian nationalism
We cannot seek an end to the oppression of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people by cajoling the broad majority of Australians with soft entreaties of ‘change the date’. As rightly pointed out by many, changing the date of Australia Day – without the achievement of social justice or legal restitution in the form of Land Rights and Treaty – only moves the celebration of unfinished business to another date.