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The Toronto Star
http://www.thestar.com/editorial/news/20000911NEW02_NUAYERS.html
September 11, 2000

Sydney 2000

Aboriginals seek Games victories

It is a condition of the liquor license of these premises that there be 
restrictions placed on sales of alcohol to aboriginal residents of a number 
of nearby communities. These resolutions have been imposed at the request 
of the communities themselves, to combat alcohol-related harm and damage to 
aboriginal culture. The licensee may refuse service to any person 
attempting to purchase alcohol on behalf of aboriginal people.

CURTIN SPRINGS, Australia - THIS IS the notice, offensive but quite legal, 
posted on the wall of an outback station down the road from Ayers Rock, the 
sacred heart of Aboriginal culture.

The notice, offensive but quite legal, posted on the wall of an outback 
station down the road from Ayers Rock, the sacred heart of Aboriginal culture.

Imagine such a declaration if it were affixed to an Edmonton saloon. There 
would be protests and placards and lawsuits galore. The Human Rights 
Commission would be in a dither. The media would scold. Heads would roll. 
And the whole damn thing would likel y end up in court, resulting in 
financial compensation for the aggrieved.

But I guess racism is in the eye of the persecuted minority. And apparently 
it's not racist when the stereotypes - and the paternalism - are being 
perpetuated by the designated victims themselves.

That's the upside-down nature of the ``Aboriginal Question'' in Australia, 
an issue that has only in recent decades muscled its way to the forefront 
of the social conscience. It took 200 years for Aussies to feel seriously 
guilty about what the white invaders did to the indigenous population of 
this continent. Now they've nothing to fear from these ruined people. What 
worries them, and only slightly, is international condemnation, especially 
if those passions are roused during the Olympic Games.

When Captain James Cook first probed the east coast in 1770, sailing into 
Botany Bay, the natives were as curious a species as the hopping 
marsupials. But they seemed thoroughly uninterested in him or his ships, 
barely casting a glance towards the Endeavour and its passengers.

Eighteen years later, with the arrival of the First Fleet - the 
introduction of transplanted convicts from England - the Aboriginals were 
in a more hostile mood. The first words they spoke to the newcomers were: 
``Warra warra!''

Translation: ``Go away!''

They didn't.

Now, more than two centuries later and with the world coming to Australia, 
the Aboriginals are still trying to get their message across. The venue is 
Sydney. The occasion is the XXVII Summer Olympics.

Ever since these Games were awarded to Sydney, Aboriginal activists have 
threatened to bring their grievances to the attention of the world by 
piggybacking on to the Olympics. Here was a global stage on which to 
dramatize all their long-accumulated resentment, their unhappiness, the 
life expectancy that's 20 years shorter than their white counterparts in 
this country, their disproportionate levels of alcoholism and unemployment, 
health problems, poverty, illiteracy, high infant mortality, their 
bitterness over 100,000 children removed from families to be raised in 
foster homes and (for the darkest skinned, unattractive to potential 
adopting parents) orphanages, the loss of their culture, their social and 
political marginalization, the fact Aboriginals weren't even recognized as 
people to be counted in the national census or allowed citizenship until 1967.

Not so different from the sorry lot of native peoples in Canada. Not 
different at all, right down to the billion dollar class-action suits 
against the national government and the $350 million ``healing fund'' 
established for counselling of the ``Stolen Generation.'' The government 
had even, after nine years of squabbling over how it would be expressed, 
drafted a Declaration of Independence wherein Australia expressed 
``sorrow'' and ``profound regret'' over past injustices. But Prime Minister 
John Howard balked at using the word ``sorry'' and had that passage of the 
declaration rewritten, arguing an official apology would confer 
``cross-generational'' guilt on Australians.

``I am not willing to apologize for things my government and my generation 
of Australians didn't do.''

Most Australians, it would seem, agreed with Howard. They don't like how 
Aboriginals were treated in the nation's infancy - in some areas, such as 
Tasmania, their tribes were wiped out completely, some were shot for sport, 
tens of thousands succumbed to white man's diseases such as smallpox and 
influenza, for which they had no natural immunity. There are now just 
386,000 Aboriginals in all of Australia, 2 per cent of the national population.

In his book, Blood on the Wattle, Bruce Elder recounts the litany of 
massacres suffered by Aboriginals since 1788, right through to the early 
decades of the 20th century: the Massacre of the Wiradjuri, the Massacres 
along the Darling River, the Myall Creek Massacre, the Massacres in the 
Gippsland Region, the Massacre at Kilcoy, Pigeon Creek, Forrest River 
Reserve, Coniston . . .

Firebrand Aboriginal leaders vowed they would disrupt the Sydney Games with 
daily protests at Olympic Park. One told the BBC that the protests are 
``going to be very violent.'' A group called Protest 2000 was created to 
co-ordinate demonstrations during the 16-day Olympiad and a Tent City has 
been established outside Sydney University.

Then a less combative faction tried to play down the threats of violence, 
claiming they would use these Games only as an opportunity to educate the 
public about the Aboriginal plight. Mainstream leaders now say they will 
not otherwise disrupt the games. Still, they cannot give assurances that 
all will remain peaceful. Rallies and marches are planned and already 
Aboriginal groups have staged ``information greeting parties'' at the 
Sydney Airport, as athletes and dignitaries arrived.

Said Geoff Clark, chairman of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander 
Commission: ``It's not for me to say there will be or won't be violence.''

For its part, the government has attempted to emphasize ``reconciliation.''

To that end, Nelson Mandela descended on the Olympic Village last week and 
was mobbed by athletes. Hurricane Rubin Carter joined Mandela on Thursday 
for a World Reconciliation Day concert in Melbourne.

The Australian Olympic Committee, acutely sensitive to the issue and 
terrified by the spectre of violence, bent over backwards to accommodate 
Aboriginal sentiments. The indigenous leaders were consulted throughout the 
Olympic planning process, Aboriginal culture and traditions will be 
highlighted in both the opening and closing ceremonies and an indigenous 
pavilion has been erected at Olympic Park.

When the Olympic torch finally reached Australia, it came here first, to 
Ayers Rock - Ulurlu, its Aboriginal name - the world's most massive 
monolith, in the red heart of Australia. This is where the torch relay on 
Australian soil began its 100-day journey towards the Olympic Stadium.

The first of 11,000 relay runners to carry the flame in-country - around 
the base of Uluru (climbing the rock is now discouraged by the Aboriginals) 
- was Nova Peris-Kneebone, who in 1996 became the first Aboriginal to win 
an Olympic gold medal as a member of the field hockey team. She ran 
barefoot, to honour tribal customs.

At the opening ceremony, the national flag-bearer will be another 
Aboriginal heroine, 400-metre Commonwealth gold medallist Cathy Freeman. 
That will be the Australian flag. But if Freeman wins her event, she'll 
carry the red, black and yellow Aboriginal flag for her victory lap.

When she did that at the '96 Commonwealth Games, when the Aboriginal flag 
was banned, Freeman was rebuked by the Australian team chief. This time she 
has received, in advance, the consent of the Australian Olympic Committee. 
It is a symbolic victory.

Back in Curtin Springs, there is another poster tacked to the wall, 
alongside the alcohol prohibition against Aboriginals. This one is a white 
man's manifesto and it's entitled: ``I'm Sorry.''

Among the dozen sarcastic mea culpas listed:

``I'm sorry that we perpetuate the myth that the Sydney 2000 Olympics is 
about sport when it is really about telling the world how horrible we white 
scum really are.''



Rosie DiManno usually appears Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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