The gap between Xmas and the first Monday after NYE is an important break for many. A time to reflect in the old year and prepare ourselves for the new.
For many Indigenous ppl the period of rest and reflection is especially important because January in Australia is a dumpster fire of politicised racism, animosity and being misunderstood and misrepresented, often accompanied by actual fires across the nation.
This year was period of respite was stolen, not just by the announcement of a ‘new anthem’ or those who have fawned over it, but by those who seem to think that such gestures represent a ‘small step in the right direction’ rather than recognising a slap in face when they see one.
The gesture itself is hollow and pointless and frustrating, but the realisation of how many people are on board with it, or how many people have zero idea why many Indigenous people are pissed about it, is a bit overwhelming... even tho we already knew it to be true.
Even tho we know well what Dr Perkins told us, that we are forever to be thrown crumbs off the white man’s tables and told be grateful, it was overwhelming to be t-boned by the warm indifference and misguided solutions of white moderates while we were trying to catch our breath.
Even tho right wing violent extremism is ever on the rise it is, as MLK wrote, the white moderate who remains our greatest stumbling block... those are ‘more devoted to "order" than to justice’;
The one ‘who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I can't agree with your methods of direct action;"’
Those ‘who paternalistically feels he can set the timetable for another man's freedom’
“Shallow understanding from people of goodwill is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection”
Those who would call themselves our ally, who are quick to include the true owners of the stolen lands they live on in their bio, are also among the first to police Indigenous identity, or to accuse of ‘setting back the cause 100 years’ when we do not say ‘thanks for the crumbs!’
Those who say we should be grateful and not bicker that ‘young’ is now ‘one’, and that ‘closing the gap will take as long to close as it did to create’, who tell us that we must smile and be polite in the face of white moderate racism if we ‘want to achieve true reconciliation’.
Those who, anytime they are pulled up by an Indigenous person for doing something problematic, scream and shout about how they have ‘supported Indigenous causes since the 1967 referendum’ but now ‘will never support anything Indigenous ever again!’
Those who justify trolling Indigenous people they disagree with as not being racist because they ‘support real Indigenous people, not fake ones’ and sleep well at night knowing they can’t be racist anyway as once in 1996 they had an Aboriginal friend for 5min at a dinner party...
Last night I had one such white moderate accuse me of perpetuating ‘us and them’ discourse, which I do, but the ‘us and them’ I care about is ‘those who fight for Indigenous rights’ and ‘those who are in the way’... there is no fence to sit on here, you are either ‘us’ or ‘them’.
White moderates and white supremacists alike are both in the way, and that is not to say they are both the same, but it is to say that they are both active and persistent stumbling blocks on the path to Indigenous rights and freedoms.
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One of the most powerful things allies can do is use their vote, not for their own (perceived) economic benefit (LNP are actually terrible economically despite rhetoric to contrary), but for the human rights of others. So I will remind you of the records of the people elected.
The Prime Minister has woeful personal ethics, taking pride in denying asylum to those seeking it instead locking them up and committing human rights atrocities. He also showed three days ago he believes in maintaining paternalism and deciding for us - one word and he’s done.
The current deputy leader of the Coalition has a very telling history.
*trigger warning* homophobia
He has since apologised of course.
He also spoke highly of Nigel Scullion’s work in Indigenous Affairs.
Nothing like the perpetual back pats of mediocrity.
I realise we didn’t get one day into 2021 without a stupid political decision demonstrating exactly why the struggle continues for us but here we are readying ourselves for another year of the struggle.
We look ahead and know the power paradigms still need to be disrupted and shifted; land protected; rights pursued and asserted and sovereignty continued to be asserted in the pursuit of land rights, self-determination and reparations.
We are a vast people of over 200 nations but I am always amazed at the use of resources to collectivise and support one another. Seeing mobs from all over the country join calls for justice, calls for action to protect Gomeroi country and calls against Rio.
It’s like when ppl say “How is tony abbott racist? He volunteered in blah blah blah!” - he’s racist because he believes in Indigenous inferiority and white superiority. His charity is borne of the white man’s burden.
It’s like how having an Aboriginal friend doesn’t mean that you can’t be racist... being racist isn’t only openly hating all people of all other races all the time. Racism is a belief that permeated every aspect of the western world for centuries.
‘Not all Indigenous people agree on thing’ is still a legitimate angle for a news story in Australia even though all white people have never agreed on anything.
We aren’t homogenous. We aren’t two dimensional. We don’t share a hive mind.
‘Indigenous leader’ is still an acceptable phrase in media too, even though it’s problematic af for perpetuating a homogeneous view of Indigenous peoples, and because it’s usually white editors who get to decide who is an Indigenous leader and who is an Indigenous activist.
I tried to point this out a couple of years ago when I did a parody article in response to an australian article titled ‘Indigenous leaders back Kerri-Anne Kennerley in racism row’ (The ‘Indigenous leaders’ in question were all Liberal party members’)
I’m a public figure of sorts, as we all are on twitter, but at the same time I’m a fairly private person. I’ll often do a public talk, write an IndigenousX article, do an interview on Indigenous radio but other than that I’d prefer to not be quoted in articles or go on tv panels.
That might be an unrealistic hope given the shit I say and do, but I’m very conscious of trying to find a balance between my public image and my real life... controlling which audiences I go in front of is a huge part of that.
With Indigenous media I feel I can just be myself and that most people will get it, even if they don’t agree with me they’ll at least understand what I’m saying. With non-Indigenous media I I just don’t feel like the audience has any interest or understanding for what I’m saying.
Part of the work we need to do to ensure that the people in this country are informed, is to elevate the voices of mob. That work is essential to us & we take it very seriously & have published some pivotal content. I will use my time sharing that content & accounts to follow.
For food inspiration and food talk that feels like a hug from an Aunty (and Uncle) - you must follow @murrigellas - enjoy salivating
This piece by @Robyn_Oxley demonstrates why the way is not necessarily the only way. Follow her for informed discussion.