Treaty, sovereignty, empowerment the key factors for meaningful recognition

By John Rowsthorne, National Indigenous Times - We fear the Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd and the leader of the Coalition, Tony Abbott are missing the most important point about recognition of Australia’s First Peoples. Perhaps they are doing so deliberately, perhaps they believe by promoting recognition of Indigenous Australians in the constitution it takes people’s mind from the real issues – we hope that is not the case.

But Mr Rudd’s address at Yirrkala to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the famous bark petitions of the Yolgnu people and the spat between him and Mr Abbott later, dishonours what the Yolgnu people were calling for 50 years ago and what the Yolgnu people and vast majority of Indigenous Australians still want to see today – a Treaty, sovereignty, empowerment.

With his words of hope and aspiration for Indigenous Australia such as those he uttered at Yirrkala last week Mr Rudd does himself a disservice. Formally recognising Australia’s First Peoples in a white man’s document, the Australian constitution means next to nothing if it doesn’t also come with three key components – Treaty, sovereignty and empowerment.

We respect and acknowledge the drive and commitment of those behind the Recognition movement to raise the profile among mainstream Australia why it is important to achieve a successful referendum to change the constitution. It is a worthy cause. The problem is recognition in the Australian constitution is such a limited outcome. The people driving the Recognition movement know this. They also want to see a Treaty, sovereignty and empowerment … they just believe the referendum is the first step in that journey.

But in our view the test of anything are the outcomes achieved. So will a successful outcome at a referendum improve the daily lives of Indigenous Australians? Will it mean jobs for the unemployed, appropriate medical services for communities, an appropriate curriculum in education where First Nations languages for example are recognised and taught to students, where Traditional Owners and Elders are properly consulted and their opinions accepted on matters involving their land and what it offers up? Will a successful referendum mean Indigenous Australians will no longer be among the highest anywhere in the world to be jailed, or die while in custody or commit suicide? Will it mean homes for the homeless?

These are the core, fundamental issues which confront our First Peoples. Our First Peoples have to confront these challenges every day of their lives and they do so with all the dignity, strength of character and resilience they can muster. These are issues not of their making. These are issues white Australian governments and bureaucrats have inflicted upon them ever since they landed on these shores more than 200 years ago.

The truth is a successful referendum which formally recognises Indigenous Australians in the constitution will not of itself deliver any positive change to the lives of those who currently suffer the indignities Australia’s white society has heaped upon them.

Many highly respected and reputable Indigenous leaders believe the referendum question is a sideshow, a distraction from the main game and this is one of the reasons why we have not seen Indigenous Australians clamouring to support the movement.

That is not to say they oppose the movement. There is little doubt the majority of Indigenous Australians are not going out of their way to derail the movement but it is equally true they are not too bothered about being actively involved either. It’s more a quiet acceptance of the process.

In any event even if every Indigenous Australian voted in favour of the referendum it would mean little in terms of deciding the outcome. Like everything else that inflicts itself upon the lives of Indigenous Australians, it is the white vote which will decide the referendum’s fate.
When Kevin Rudd stood last week at Yirrkala before the Yolgnu people, the latest batch of survivors from the litany of government failures of more recent times, he declared he wanted to see constitutional recognition finalised within the next two years. He then took the opportunity to use the occasion to do some political pointscoring at the expense of Tony Abbott.

But Mr Rudd is kidding himself if he thinks the “feel good” mood of changing the constitution will make any real difference to the lives of Indigenous Australians because it simply won’t. Mr Rudd, Mr Abbott and white Australia may feel good with that outcome but it won’t have addressed the fundamental issues this nation must ultimately confront.

The reality is the only actions that will properly address the issues confronting Indigenous Australia is for Mr Rudd and Mr Abbott to show themselves to be statesmen, men who really do care for their fellow human being by declaring there should be a Treaty with all the First Peoples nations, that Australia will recognise and acknowledge the sovereignty of the First Peoples nations and that government will empower the First Peoples nations to administer and prioritise the work required in their respective communities to deliver living standards at least equal to those enjoyed by the rest of Australia.

That, Mr Rudd and Mr Abbott would be meaningful. That would make a difference.

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Comments

finally, some fresh air and a real view of what is required to be placed
in the constitution to allow federal governments and oppositions to
really do something truly practical to further the still remote
possibility of reconciliation.

some time ago i attended a forum at the university of nsw where both mick
gooda and les mazeler, and others, on the recognition and constitutional
arguments. les was the only one who spoke against the process and the
likely outcome for aboriginal people, which would be nothing substantive
in any way.

my contribution was that i agreed with les but i strongly considered our
current constitution to be englished-based and must be scrapped and a
new australian constitution be formulated that would include both a bill
of rights and acceptance of the aboriginal and torres strait islanders as
the true and historical owners of the land and its resources. this, in my
opinion can be done by including the relevant clauses and paragraphs from
the un declaration on the rights of indigenous people. the declaration,
after initial blocking, was accepted and signed by the australian
government.

since then it has laid dormant and unused and probably forgotten by the
government itself our new constitution must also recognise that this is indeed a
multicultural country and australia is the better for it!

john rowsthorne, the author of the following article, deserves our thanks
and appreciation for putting up a better outcome than that being pushed
by krudd or abbot and other assimmilationist organisations and
individuals.

we do not need recognition that our ancestors were here first. we already
know that and accept it.

we want and, more importantly, need our treaty, sovereignty and
empowerment as john has so cogently stated.

another matter that i need to raise is relative to the deadlys that are
currently being voted on to find the best aboriginal singer, actor, etc. normally this all
passes me by but this time it's personal. not ray jackson personal but isja personal. it's geoff
bagnall of the nit personal. it's the kings cross police shootings personal. geoff's article
is up against about four others that probably deserve the vote as well.

but this article is about the kings cross shootings that the police
investigated themselves and made a report to the nsw dpp who then stated that the police involved
had no case to answer. absolute crap, as abbott would say. the kings cross police
endangered lives by shooting their high-powered glocks into the car whilst being unconcerned
about who they may have killed and then brutally assaulted the two wounded youth of
the 6 teenagers involved.

this is not about geoff getting a gong or even isja. why i am asking for
the deadly's vote to win is because that nit cover-page written by geoff will go national
around australia, perhaps even globally, and that gives legs to the nit campaign for justice to
occur for the sake of the 6 youth and their families.

real justice must use every avenue open to it so it may be, finally,
obtained.

fkj

ray jackson
president
indigenous social justice association

isja01@internode.on.net
(m) 0450 651 063
(p) 02 9318 0947
address 1303/200 pitt street waterloo 2017

www.isja.org.au

we live and work on the stolen lands of the gadigal people.

sovereignty treaty social justice