"Noel Pearson will support massive intrusion into Aboriginal communities and country"

An Aboriginal activist predicts massive intrusion into Aboriginal communities and country with the support of York Penininsula personality Noel Pearson under the new LNP government in Queensland.

Responding to an article in The Australian newspaper which reported cases of Pearson abusing journalists and government officials, Laurie Forde wrote: "I have personal experience of Pearson abusing the female editor of an Indigenous publication in the most foul way when the paper questioned whether he had given too much to the Keating government during the NT negotiations.

"At the time I urged that she cut him some slack as he was under tremendous pressure, but all I have heard about Pearson's behaviour since then bear out Tony Koch's comments.

"In my opinion he has done a lot of damage to the Aboriginal cause whatever
his intentions, and much worse is to come now that we have an LNP government
in Queensland who agree with Pearson that the Wild Rivers legislation should
be reversed and that Native Title land should go under 99 year lease
agreements.

"I am tipping a massive intrusion into Aboriginal communities and Country
with the support of Pearson, with a subsequent erosion of what little power
Aboriginal people now have because of Native Title."

Excerpts of the story by Tony Koch:
“In this case [the reporting of dugong hunting in North Queensland], as so often in my experience as a journalist, the person who exploded was Cape York indigenous leader Noel Pearson.

“I wasn't party to the phone call Pearson made to the reporter, but I understand he was extremely angry. Anyone who knows Pearson will understand what that means: he used language so foul it couldn't be repeated here, leaving the journalist stunned and shaken, before slamming the phone down in her ear.

“I've known Pearson since the early 1990s, and I wish I could say I was surprised to hear he had behaved so awfully towards somebody who really didn't deserve it. But the sad truth is, I wasn't.

“Like many others, I've long understood that, for all his charisma and brilliance, Pearson is only human and therefore, like all of us, well short of perfect.

“To give what will come in this column some context, I should say I've worked closely with Pearson for more than 15 years, and I've long admired his “beautiful mind", and his gift for sweet oratory.

“There was a time - not so long ago, actually - when I believed Pearson had
the potential to mature into a leader for both black and white Australia,
perhaps even into the space once occupied by the late, great Charles Perkins.

“Pearson was one of the first Aboriginal leaders to argue for an end to the
flow of cheap alcohol - he called it poison - into remote communities and town camps to protect women and children from Aboriginal men, and Aboriginal men from themselves.

“He bravely identified welfare - "sit-down money" - as being just as
pernicious as booze, and he encouraged a difficult but important debate about Aboriginal people and personal responsibility.

“Pearson argued for policy that would force Aboriginal parents, with
financial penalties if necessary, to take their children to school and to properly
feed and clothe them.

“It would be no exaggeration to say that I have written hundreds of
articles about Pearson, supporting him, and his ideas. The papers I have written for, Brisbane's The Courier-Mail and The Australian, have given him weekly or fortnightly columns in their high-selling Saturday papers.

“I would like to say I was not blind to his faults - his tendency to carry
into a room a whiff of intellectual superiority, for example, that can at times veer dangerously close to abrasive arrogance - but I did sometimes turn a blind eye.

“In November 1999, Pearson poured a glass of water over the head of ABC
radio interviewer Sharon Molloy after she asked a question he did not like.
(Pearson apologised two days later when the incident got reported.)

“He has abused me more than once, but most viciously after I wrote about
the Djarragun College in Cairns after it was accused of fraudulently claiming
government funding by falsely inflating student numbers. Pearson didn't
think the story should be written, and he blasted me down the phone, telling me that I was a "f ... ing disgrace" who had "made a living out of the misery of
Aboriginal people".

“I wondered at the time whether he would have hurled that allegation at me
had we been standing face-to-face.

“Former Queensland premier Anna Bligh told me years ago that I should not
feel Pearson's contempt extended only to journalists. She said he destroyed a
solid supporter base in her government by abusing officials who genuinely tried to help implement his responsibilities agenda, telling them they were "f ... ing racist white c ... s". Bligh's predecessor, Peter Beattie, who worked closely with Pearson, recently confirmed to me another incident where a female public servant was abused by Pearson over the phone in those terms.

“I can't say why I've never publicly criticised Pearson for this kind of
behaviour before. Perhaps I thought his sudden outbursts and his often bitter tongue were part of the price we had to pay for his brilliance. Was I too thrilled, especially in the early years, at the sight of Pearson, burning bridges and stepping on toes, saying what nobody else would say, in his bid to save Aboriginal Australia?

“I suppose because I'm older than Pearson, I also figured he would grow
humbler over time and the grace that comes with age would strengthen him as a leader. I imagined him reaching out to others, taking wise counsel, drawing an ever-wider circle of influence, as he sought to improve the plight of his people.

“It pains me to say the opposite has happened: Pearson's profile has blossomed, but so has his ego, and while that is only human, there have been
consequences.

“Instead of drawing people into his orbit, Pearson has succeeded in pushing
almost everyone away. In recent weeks, as he stepped up a new and extraordinarily expensive campaign for more funds for Cape York schools, he has taken to berating people who could actually teach him a thing or two.

“The talented assistant director-general of indigenous education and
training futures at Queensland's Education Department, Ian Mackie, for example, has a lifetime of teaching and learning behind him, but Pearson won't give him the time of day.

“Chris Sarra, who in 2010 was named Queensland Australian of the Year for his
work with Aboriginal children, and who spent seven years as principal of the
Cherbourg Aboriginal community school before establishing the Cherbourg
TAFE, has also fallen foul of Pearson.

“Sarra does not support the Pearson model, which attempts to force children to attend school by threatening to financially penalise the parents by cutting welfare benefits - but he has other ideas, some of which seem to work.

“Pearson's response is it's my way or the highway. Pearson is asking the federal government to invest something like $70 million in a Direct Instruction
system of teaching for Cape York community schools. According to a draft proposal doing the rounds, it is Pearson's Cape York Partnerships with input from Pearson's Cape York Aboriginal Australian Academy that has developed the plan, which in turn has been overseen by a steering committee of which Pearson is a member.

“When Pearson was at the peak of his popularity, nobody would have questioned this, but now they want to know: why do the huge amounts of money that flow to the Cape always seem to go through organisations connected to Pearson? What evidence is there the millions of taxpayer dollars that have gone into Pearson's projects through the years - the Cape York Institute, Cape York Land Council, Balkanu and Cape York Partnerships - have eased the burden of his people?

“These are questions Pearson does not want to answer, but we must not be afraid to ask them, for the truth is this: for all his restless energy, Pearson
cannot solve every problem of Aboriginal Australia on his own.

“On the contrary, his desire - and I believe it to be genuine - to restore
dignity to Aboriginal people in remote communities is much likelier to be achieved by intelligent people with a range of skills working collaboratively on issues of substance.

“That requires leadership, and that is a real problem. Pearson knows as well as anyone he has never spoken for all of Aboriginal Australia. There are many
in Aboriginal communities who have long said that where he goes, they will
not follow.

“By contrast, his standing in the world of policy and funding is immense,
and what a calamity it would be if those special gifts Pearson has been given - to communicate and to inspire - never developed into that quite different skill, the ability to lead.”

Comments

Having been but briefly a teacher at one of his Cape York schools I can say that I have by him and his people been treated atrociously. He and his minions, mainly white have destroyed my career and self esteem. I have been bad mouthed throughout the area and the far north district, by members of his merry band who work for the department as well, but I have no right of reply because of code of conduct. I went to this school feeling that with my skills in this area, especially reading I would be an asset. I was treated with scorn and disrepect and then these people say that they should be respected.

well noel pearson,where do you get your info from,oooohhhhhh that,s right you in your boat by yourself,as every community I been to say you never have and never will speak for them as you got to be the worst government JACKIE JACKIE of them all,you break our law every time you open your mouth you don't speak for any other nation then your own and I hear that your community don't want you,you will be sung very soon.