Personal and Political: two perspectives on the Stolen
Generations
"Any man's death diminishes me,
because I am involved in mankind."
--John Donne, Meditation
XVII
Since the elections last November, the issue
of an apology to the members of the Stolen Generations has been the topic most
often discussed when the question of the Rudd Government's agenda for Indigenous
affairs comes up in the mainstream media. Having from the start pretty much
ruled out a review of the Intervention and immediate action on any of its
programs, Rudd did promise to make the Apology his top priority. It was a
brilliant symbolic move allowing him to signal his distance from Howard and to
cast off, at least in the area of Aboriginal policy, the "me too"
label.The Apology has never been far
from the limelight in the last decade, since the appearance of
Bringing Them
Home, the report of the inquiry led
by Ronald Wilson, President of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
(HREOC) and Mick Dodson, its Social Justice Commissioner, on the removal of
Aboriginal children from their families across Australia during the period from
1910 through 1970. Thanks to Howard and his right-wing supporters as outlets
like
Quadrant,
the very notion of whether there was a Stolen Generation has been questioned.
The issue of whether the Federal Government owed anyone an apology for the
practice of child removal has been equally contentious. In the meantime, Sorry
Day has become part of the Indigenous cultural landscape, linked to the
anniversary of the 1967 Referendum. (The report was tabled in Parliament on May
26, 1997, one day shy of the 30th anniversary of the
Referendum.)Prior to the Second World
War, when it was assumed that Aborigines were a dying race, it was feared that
"half-castes" were not. In a racist and eugenicist policy framework, children
of mixed black and white parentage were removed to missions that were halfway
houses to Southern cities and marriages to whites that would "breed out the
color." This was the stuff of The
Rabbit-Proof Fence.
In the wake of Hitler and Stalin and
with the rejection of colonialism as empires were broken apart after World War
II, Australian policy towards Aboriginal children underwent a shift as well,
with removals often justified as alternatives to neglect and wantonness, or as
the preparation of children for assimilation into the new, multicultural
Australian community.I've recently
finished reading two quite different books that reflect on stories of the Stolen
Generations, and I've found them to be illuminating and worthy of consideration
as the issues surrounding the Apology and related compensation are bruited with
sound-bite coverage in the newspapers today.
The first of these, Quentin
Beresford's Rob Riley: an Aboriginal leader's quest for
justice (Aboriginal Studies Press,
2006) is a major biography of an Aboriginal leader who was also a "stolen"
child. It tells the story of a generation of Indigenous politics through the
lens of one man's life.The second is
Robert Manne's In
Denial: the Stolen Generations and the
Right (Black Inc., 2001), which was
originally published as the very first
Quarterly
Essay. Part history in itself, to
three parts polemic, In
Denial bears witness to the bitterness and
petty warfare the report spawned, on a stage that seems far removed from any one
person's experience. In telling the
story of Rob Riley's life, Beresford does not attempt anything so simplistic as
reducing the varied and important achievements of Riley's decades at the
forefront of Aboriginal politics to an attempt to work through the childhood
trauma he endured as a result of being forcibly separated and kept at a
deliberate distance from his family. But there is little doubt that Beresford
find the seeds of the anger, the sense of injustice and perhaps ultimately the
despair that drove Riley in the experiences of his
youth.Rob Riley: an
Aboriginal leaders's quest for justice is a
history of Aboriginal politics in the 1980s and 1990s that is told from the
point of view of the Aboriginal participants, most notably, of course, that of
Rob Riley himself. Riley's personal charisma and magnetism has outlived him by
more than a decade now, and I suspect that his popularity and the affection
people felt for him contributed significantly to the selection of this book as
the winner of this year's Stanner
Award. The stories that are told in this book are often familiar in
their general outlines, but are made new for me by reading them from the
perspective of an Aboriginal insider, rather than a legislator, historian, or
journalist, as I have in the
past.Riley's involvement with the
battles for land rights from Noonkanbah onwards and his role in seeking reforms
arising from deaths in custody put him squarely in the frame of the largest
issues of his time. His work with the Aboriginal Legal Service in Western
Australia transformed that organization. On the opposite coast, he was an early
and important Indigenous presence in Canberra, as advisor to Minister for
Aboriginal Affairs Gerry Hand in Bob Hawke's
government.In Beresford's portrait,
Riley is not a man easily given to compromise. He was disdainful of a system of
land rights recognition that was based on Indigenous people needing to
demonstrate continued association with land they claimed, or indeed to justify
the right at all. To Riley, land rights counterbalanced dispossession, and he
saw the kinds of compromise that eventually became enshrined in Australian law
in the 1990s as fundamental failures, especially to Aboriginal people whose
connection to the land had been completely severed decades if not centuries
earlier.He is also a driven man, who
knows little relaxation over two decades, and seemingly less peace. His life as
told in these pages has a relentless quality to it. Perhaps because Beresford
chooses to open the book, literally in the first paragraph, with Riley's
suicide, there is an air of inevitability, of prediction, and of inescapable
fate in all that follows. In the end, I think it is unfair to the complexity of
Riley's personality and undercutting of his achievements to predicate the entire
story of his life on its end like this. Beresford comes much closer to the
critical point in the final paragraph of his introduction than he does in its
first:
Rob's story has much to offer contemporary Australia. It sheds light on the still unresolved intergenerational impact of past racial policy, while opening up to closer scrutiny Australia's response to Aboriginal demands for political change. The life Rob chose in confronting white Australia with the demand for understanding and justice provides many insights into the challenges faced by Aboriginal activists of this era. Despite the tragedy of his death, his life is a story of survival against great odds. Rob triumphed against a childhood ravaged by emotional and material deprivation. Forged by the history of racial oppression, he sought to change the course of history so others would have opportunities historically denied Aboriginal people (p. 8)
Manne's essay begins with a
combination of historical perspectives on child removal and brief biographical
sketches of individuals, like Riley, who suffered at the hands of bureaucrats
well-intentioned or not. His scale is generational rather than individual,
however, and his arena is most decidedly political rather than personal. In a
way, he is more concerned with Bringing
Them Home, the report and investigation, that
he is with the generations
themselves.It is useful to be reminded
that the HREOC inquiry was not an investigation with the status of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Deaths in
Custody. The overall budget was much smaller for one thing; the HREOC
had no subpoena power for another. It is likewise useful to read reports of the
manner and motivations of removal across the country, and to remember that were
individuals with complex motivations, some contradictory, on the government and
mission side of the story.It is also
important to understand Manne's conclusion: that no matter what the
circumstances, no matter what the motives, no matter what the outcomes, the
greatest horror in the story of the Stolen Generation is the absolute refusal,
if not the inability, to recognize the terrible human cost of separating mother
and child. The failure to imagine not just the consequences, but the action
itself from the Aboriginal point of view is the most damning judgment that can
be placed on the perpetrators.It seems
a shame--an understandable one, but nonetheless misplaced energy--that Manne
spends so much of his time in this essay not simply documenting the shoddy
arguments by which those on the Right tried to talk away the import of
Bringing Them
Home but attempting to refute them as well.
Perhaps it was important to fight against denialism at that moment in time, when
Keith Windschuttle had just appeared forcefully on the scene to redirect the
controversy over the Stolen Generations into a larger disputation about
Aboriginal deaths on the frontier.But
in some ways it now seems that Manne got himself trapped in the terms of debate
framed by the Right. . He gets trapped in the very nit-picking, legalistic,
point-scoring kinds of arguments he accuses his opponents of indulging in.
Worst of all is the argument over whether the policies of removal represent an
Australian instance of genocide.In the
end, whether 25,000 children constitute a generation, whether breeding out the
color or breeding out the savagery was the motive, whether the revelations of
Nazi programs of racial eradication changed the policy in Australia, or simply
the way it was defined seem ultimately beside the point. Casting "Aboriginal
Protectors" in the mold of what has become the archetypal evil of modern
times--making Neville and Cook the confreres of Eichmann and Mengele--ultimately
seems to me to buy Manne nothing but more ammunition for his opponents to lob at
him. If a refusal to acknowledge something as genocide can be transmuted into a
refusal to offer an apology at all, more harm than good has been
done.That thousands and ten of
thousands of individuals suffered as a result of the policy of removals has been
and can be amply demonstrated. Whether that harm has been fully understood is
debatable; I suspect that it has not. The time has come to attempt such an
understanding without allowing the shadows of ideological debates to dim the
light that needs to be cast. Works of individual biography like Beresford's
Rob
Riley can help further that understanding.
One hopes that an apology will as
well. To apologize sincerely requires humility, and I am reminded once again
that humility is a very complex virtue. And it will take courage as well as
humility to guide us away from the Manichaean battles of Robert Manne and Andrew
Bolt and toward a nuanced model of compassion for future
generations.
Posted: Sun - January 20, 2008 at 03:05 PM
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Readings, reviews, and reflections by an American observer of Australian Indigenous art, culture, politics, anthropology, music, and literature.
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Published On: Jan 20, 2008 04:07 PM
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