
Political establishment and mass media ill will towards the Aboriginal Tent Embassy should not confuse us. The real and valid question is still the past, present and future of Aboriginal Australians.
On January 26, Australia Day, I started a jog of nearly five hours with my family, from Darling Harbour to The Rocks and Circular Quay then along George Street back to Town Hall. Ironically, this day was labelled as a day of 鈥渦nity鈥. The only Aboriginal person I encountered was the regular busker at the corner of Circular Quay. Obviously this was not a day of jubilation for Aboriginal people as they have correctly been marking it as a 鈥淢ourning Day鈥.
Yet the rest of us 鈥 鈥渂oat people鈥 from different backgrounds 鈥 were celebrating the land of 鈥渉oney and milk鈥. I felt appalled and ashamed.
At the same time, in the capital city of this occupied land, Julia Gillard, the PM who became the comic Cinderella of rulers, lost her shoe while the security forces shoved her into her parked vehicle. Tony Abbott, predicted as Gillard鈥檚 successor, was behind her under the umbrella of a group of police.
I believe what happened next, or who was behind the news leak or precisely who tipped off protesters on Abbott鈥檚 whereabouts, is a callous effort that merely tries to divert public attention from the real question: the fate of Aboriginal people.
The ruling class represented by the Liberal and Labor parties have been contributing to the misery in which Aboriginals live today. The political establishment and the media typically have focused on the hectic, "heroic" evacuation of Gillard and Abbott.
The media also pumped up the flag burning that took place outside parliament the next day. And there is a political reason behind the media attacks. As historian and author Henry Steele Commager once said: 鈥淢en in authority will always think that criticism of their policies is dangerous. They will always equate their policies with patriotism, and find criticism subversive.鈥
The Australian flag is one of the strongest symbols of patriotism. The ABC reported on January 24: 鈥淧eople who fly Australian flags on their cars have more racist views than the rest of the population, a new study has found.鈥
Furthermore, author William H Boyer once said: 鈥淏lind patriotism has been kept intact by rewriting history to provide people with moral consolation and a psychological basis for denial.鈥
The flag that Aboriginal kids and activists burnt last week is still decorated with a colonial symbol: the British Union Jack. Under this flag, the first 鈥渂oat people鈥 arrived here and soon after mass killings of Aboriginals started. Under this flag, Aboriginal children have been stolen, their land and their basic rights have been taken away. Recently, Aboriginal people have faced the infamous and racist 鈥渋ncome management鈥 and 鈥渋ntervention鈥 policies designed, approved and executed by successive Liberal and Labor governments.
As Gillard lost her shoe in the police shamble (the so-called rescue mission), the mass media shifted the public's attention into creation of a new version of the Cinderella fairytale. The victim was the Aboriginal cause, again.
[Mansour Raghazi is a state organiser with the NSW CFMEU.]
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