#indigenous australians

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From a sporting point of view, her hero is the Sydney Olympics 400m gold medallist Cathy Freeman who became the second Indigenous Olympic champion, after Nova Peris. “I still get goosebumps whenever I watch that video,” says Williams. “She had the whole nation and a whole culture on her shoulders. And she was just so cool, calm and collected throughout the whole thing. And the whole country remembers it.

“I’d love to do that myself and inspire the next generation of athletes, not just footballers, but athletes and especially Indigenous athletes. There’s such an untapped talent pool there and just love to go out into different communities and just inspire that generation to dream big and make it for themselves.”

DECEMBER 14 - FAITH BANDLERFaith Bandler was a very important figure in the fight for indigenous rig

DECEMBER 14 - FAITH BANDLER

Faith Bandlerwas a very important figure in the fight for indigenous rights in Australia. The daughter of an indigenous father forced into cheap labour on plantations, she faced the same discrimination while working on fruit farms and getting significantly less pay than white workers.

She began her activism in 1956, tirelessly campaigning for the removal of several discriminatory provisions from the Australian Constitution. Her efforts led to a historical referendum in 1967, which attracted the support of more than 90% of the population, and offered indigenous Australians the same civil rights as white citizens.


Today’s post is a reblogfromCelebrating Amazing Women, another great Tumblr project you should be following.


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What a redneck wonderland footy has become. Every weekend, somewhere in Australia, Adam Goodes steps

What a redneck wonderland footy has become. Every weekend, somewhere in Australia, Adam Goodes steps out onto a footy field. Simultaneously, an army of gutless drongos get ready to express their contempt for him, hiding anonymously in the choir of clowns who boo his every step.

Hey, bigots, don’t get me wrong.

I defend your right to express your unfathomable sense of outrage and injustice. It must burn long and deep. Probably over the spiralling price of a pie at the footy or the quality of the rubbish beer you force yourself to drink whilst acting like obnoxious school kids.

Your worries and concerns must weigh heavily on your poor benighted souls. So knock yourselves out. Boo away. At least have the courage though to admit what it is.

Racism.

Naked, loud, contemptible, pathetic and unashamed.

None of this crap about Goodes staging for free kicks, being a “sniper” or sweet talking the umpires as the reason for the booing.

Don’t use football as shield for your prejudice.

Adam Goodes has made it quite clear he hears those boos as a statement on his race and culture. Blokes like Goodes tend to have a finely tuned radar for racism. When you have been living with it all your life you learn to speak it’s many ugly languages.

 So when he tells you what it means to him and you choose to boo, you’re confirming to him and every other indigenous footballer what you’re really about.

What you don’t like and can’t abide is that Adam Goodes won’t be the Aboriginal footballer you want him to be.

He refuses to simply be the smiling face of AFL Indigenous Round where the game’s self congratulation goes into over drive and Aboriginal people are celebrated in a set of proscribed rituals that say nothing about the true state of affairs and everything about our need to be absolved from responsibility.

A smoking ceremony here. A ceremonial dance there. A welcome to country and then goodbye, onto the next costume party.

No, Goodes wants to look you in the eye and talk about who we really are and where we’re really at. Goodes wants to confront racism and its uncomfortable truths. In the stands you sit in, the mines you work in, the boardrooms you meet in, the homes you live in.

He won’t simply be the Aboriginal man you want him to be.

And with your symphony of boos you’ve made it quite clear where you stand.

The fact that you fuel your own sense of outrage at Goodes and Lewis Jetta’s “war dance”  shows how feeble minded and self righteous you are.

Where’s your sense of outrage at the appalling gap in life expectancy for indigenous people?

The massive over representation of indigenous people in jail?

The continuing scourge of deaths in custody?

Your silence is deafening on those issues. Your outrage reserved for a man who dances on the footy field.

And whilst you’re booing ever louder and ever longer you can try drown out the truth of these things.

You can’t. And you won’t.

Because Adam Goodes’ legacy will endure long after your hollow howls ring out.

And that must hurt the most.

- Francis Leach


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