From the foreword
by Bess Nungarrayi Price, chairperson
of the Northern Territory’s Indigenous Affairs Advisory
Council and a member of the Commonwealth Government’s
Advisory Group on Violence against Women:
The old Law was not about human rights.
It was about unconditional loyalty and obedience … We
still respect and honour our ancestors and want to keep
our culture. But my people are confused. If they go the
blackfella way they break whitefella law, if they go
whitefella way they break blackfella law. Our young men
are caught in the middle, that’s why they fill up the
jails ... We now need to change the letter of our Law to
keep its spirit alive. We need to do this ourselves but
with the support of governments and our fellow citizens
… I don’t agree with everything that Gary Johns says in
this book but he is honest and believes in what he says.
I am happy to write this foreword and to encourage and
praise him for the contribution he is making to the
debate we need to have.
Gary Johns:
I want Aborigines to
be happy. Most are, but a large number are not. These
Aborigines mostly live on their land in remote parts of
northern Australia. They live in a world bequeathed by
the Whiteman’s dream of Aboriginal self-determination.
They live blighted lives. They have been locked out of
the modern economy. Two of the principle ways in which
they have been locked out have been the messages of the
importance of their culture and their land.
It is as if a
drawbridge was raised in the late 1960s over a moat
separating an ancient world and a modern world. The
drawbridge was raised when public policy shifted from
integration to self-determination. Lowering the
drawbridge is going to be very difficult.
I am not speaking on
behalf of Aborigines. I am speaking about them as a
matter of public policy. I am speaking about them, not
to tell them who they should be or how they should
conduct themselves, but to point out the consequences of
their actions.
Five commissions into
Aboriginal child sexual abuse each recommended the same
remedy: go back to Aboriginal culture. An examination of
Aboriginal culture pretty quickly reveals that it is
built around old men using the crudest methods to keep
as many young women as they can. Not only is this
culture illegal; it should be frowned upon by all women,
even by those who are cheerleaders in the culture game.
Yet the culture
remains unexamined as a basis for modern living. Indeed,
it is used as a shield against prying eyes: eyes which
see bad behaviour. Similarly, land rights have been used
as a shield against adjustment to the modern economy. My
advice to Aborigines is not to wait for the Whiteman. He
will not, because he cannot build an economy for you.
The architects of
self-determination tried to design a separate world for
Aborigines based on race and cultural difference, while
demanding resources from the mainstream economy. A vast
number of Aboriginal organisations have grown up to
service this dream. These organisations depend on white
man’s resources. They control the lives of Aboriginal
people. They also stand in the way of those Aborigines
left out of the modern economy. They will not easily let
go.
The thesis is simple enough,
the more that is done for Aborigines
the more disabled
they become. Unfortunately,
there is now so much
invested
in helping
Aborigines,
and so many people dependent on
the Aboriginal
help
industry, that we are
in a weaker position now to assist
than when missionaries walked off
the job
in
the 1960s. Much blame must be sheeted
home to those ‘intellectuals’
who built
their reputations on finding
fault with
the white man and treating
the black man as an empty vessel
without willpower. Having
told
the black man that
the white man is
the cause of
their ills,
the black man has acted like anyone
else waiting
for
their compensation payout. They
have lost
their reason for being
and started to behave badly. Coming
from a culture of violent behaviour,
particularly by men against
women, has not helped.
The great work of humanitarians
in educating
Australians to better understand those who
are different from
the mainstream
has been done.
In
the past, Aborigines
have faced racial prejudice based on
their looks and language. To
the extent that prejudice exists
today it is based on bad behaviour.
Australians will not tolerate bad behaviour.
There is much work to be done (and
much to be undone)
in preparing
Aborigines
for
the modern world.
Copies
of this title are available from Connor Court:
http://www.connorcourt.com/catalog1/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=8&products_id=155