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Since the European invasion until very recently,
government policy relating to Aboriginal people has been designed
and implemented by non-Aboriginal people. The common justification
for most policies for Aborigines was that they were "for their
own good". There have been policies of protection, assimilation,
self-determination and reconciliation. It is now clear that none
of these policies have actually made the condition of Australia’s
Indigenous people any better than it was prior to the invasion.
When the six Australian colonies became a Federation
in 1901, white Australia believed that the Aborigines were a dying
race and the Constitution made only two references to them. Section
127 excluded Aborigines from the census (although heads of cattle
were counted) and Section 51 (Part 26) gave power over Aborigines
to the States rather than to the Federal Government. This was
the situation until the referendum
of 1967 when an overwhelming majority of Australians voted to
include Aborigines in the census of their own country.
In 1902, women in NSW were granted the right
to vote, but this did not apply to Aboriginal women. And when
compulsory voting was introduced in NSW in 1929, Aboriginal people
were still excluded from voting under the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918. In 1962, the Federal Government gave Aborigines the
optional right to vote. State laws, however, still classified
"natives" as "wards of the state" and as such they were denied
the right to vote in State elections.
In 1881, George Thornton
MLC was appointed the first NSW Protector of Aborigines. Under
the NSW Aborigines Protection Act 1909-1943, this position was
abolished and replaced by the Aborigines Protection Board. This
became the NSW Aborigines Welfare Board in 1943. The Board administered
government policy, dictating where Aborigines could live and work,
their freedom of movement, their personal finances and their child
rearing practices.
The NSW Aborigines Welfare Board controlled
Aboriginal lives until the 1960s, pursuing policies that are now
acknowledged as having contributed to the destruction of Aboriginal
families and society by separating children from their parents.
These children became known as ‘the stolen generations’ and are
still searching for their families. They now number between 15,000
and 20,000 in NSW alone. During the First World War, some four
to five hundred Aboriginal people enlisted in the armed forces.
During this time, the State government continued to remove Aboriginal
children from their families, including youngsters whose fathers
were serving overseas.
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An
official commemoration and wreath-laying for Aboriginal servicemen
held at the War Memorial, Hyde Park, with the Governor’s Rolls Royce
in the background. Undated.
(Australian Photographic Agency - 31662,
State Library of New South Wales.) |
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The NSW Aborigines Protection Act subsumed a number of previous
Acts, including the 1867 law prohibiting alcohol being sold to
Aborigines. It also provided for Aborigines of "mixed blood" to
be issued with Certificates of Exemption, releasing them from
the provisions of the Act and its regulations. These certificates,
commonly known as "dog tags", came at a price as individuals were
forced to relinquish family connections. They were not allowed
to visit their own families and were gaoled if caught doing so.
Many of those who travelled to Sydney needed an exemption certificate
to allow them to work. When they wanted to return home for family
business like funerals, they had to get written permission from
the Manager of the station or mission to do so. The Welfare Board
saw the increase in the number of certificates issued as proof
of the success of its assimilation policy.
The Board’s policy was based on a belief
that "protection" of Aborigines would lead to their "advancement"
to the point where they would eventually fit into the white community.
Protection and segregation policies were enforced until the1940s,
when they were replaced with policies of assimilation and integration.
Features of the administration of the Board included the implementation
of the assimilation policy, and, from 1950/51, the movement of
Aboriginal people to stations where they could be prepared for
absorption into the general community.
The policy of assimilation meant individual
families were persuaded to share the life in the towns with whites.
Earlier government policies had relocated Aborigines from their
homelands to reserves. The assimilation policy aimed at breaking
up these reserves and "encouraging" people to give up seasonal
and casual work, replacing this with regular work for wages (which
remained unequal). The stations were considered as "stepping-stones
to civilisation".
The Aborigines Welfare Board of NSW consisted
of 11 members, with two positions designated for Aborigines, one
"full-blood" and one having "a mixture of Aboriginal blood". The
amendment to the Aborigines Protection Act in 1911 established
Kinchela Boys Home and Cootamundra Girls Home for Aboriginal children
removed from their families. In these homes, Aboriginal children
were taught farm labouring and domestic work, many of them ending
up as servants in the houses of wealthy Sydney residents.
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While espousing the benefits of assimilation
to Aboriginal people, the policy still denied their basic rights,
even in the 1960s. It stopped them from raising their own children,
stopped freedom of movement, having access to education, receiving
award wages, marrying without permission, eating in restaurants,
entering a pub, swimming in a public pool or having the right
to vote.
The Aborigines Act of 1969 abolished the NSW
Aborigines Welfare Board and Aboriginal children then became wards
of the State. The Welfare Board’s functions were transferred to
the Department of Child Welfare and Social Welfare. This later
became the Department of Youth and Community Services, which created
the Directorate of Aboriginal Welfare. In 1975, the Commonwealth
Government took over many of the functions and records of the
Directorate of Aboriginal Welfare, which then became the Aboriginal
Services Branch. The Department’s name was changed in 1988 to
Family and Community Services and in 1995 to Community Services.
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Aborigines
march from Redfern to Parliament House on 13 August 1980 to demonstrate
support for the recommendations on land rights by the NSW Parliamentary
Select Committee upon Aborigines.
(Goorialla: Official Organ
of Operation Aborigine, Summer 1980/81. © Co-operative
for Aborigines Ltd. If this image is reproduced in any other
form, please acknowledge the Tranby Aboriginal College Archives,
13 Mansfield St, Glebe, NSW, 2037) |
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The NSW Land Rights Act 1983 was another important milestone.
The dispossession of Aboriginal people from their land is acknowledged
in the Act’s preamble, which states:
- Land in the State of New South Wales was
traditionally owned and occupied by Aborigines:
- Land is of spiritual, social, cultural
and economic importance to Aborigines;
- It is fitting to acknowledge the importance
which land has for Aborigines and the need for Aborigines of
land:
- It is accepted that as a result of past
government decisions the amount of land set aside for Aborigines
has been progressively reduced without compensation.
A three-tiered system of Aboriginal Land Councils
(State, regional and local) was established under this Act. The
Metropolitan Land Council’s Offices are in the old "Day
of Mourning" Site in Elizabeth Street and the NSW State
Land Council is located at Parramatta. There are 120 Local Aboriginal
Land Councils in NSW and 13 Regional Land Councils.
The NSW Department of Aboriginal Affairs
(DAA) was formed on 4 April 1995 (replacing the former Office
of Aboriginal Affairs) and is recognised as the leading advocate
and representative voice of Aboriginal affairs at both State and
community level. The rhetoric has shifted to one of encouraging
partnerships with the Aboriginal community and NSW Government
service providers. The functions of DAA are determined by the
Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and conform to the directions
and requirements of the NSW Government. In partnership with the
Cabinet Office, DAA provides an executive service to the Cabinet
Committee on Aboriginal affairs, which sets the direction of Government
programs.
On a national level, the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC) is Australia’s national policy
making and service delivery agency for Indigenous people. It is
an independent Commonwealth authority established under the ATSIC
Act. ATSIC has offices in all States and Territories and advises
the Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs,
while delivering programs to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people.
ATSIC is governed by elected Regional Councils
and power over decisions about policy making and funding is held
by a Board of Commissioners representing their local communities.
In relation to the past administration of
Aboriginal affairs, it should be recognised that Aboriginal people
have continuously resisted the imposition of much of this government
legislation. The official records reflect this opposition and
contain letters written by Aboriginal people seeking to recover
their land, to receive the right to vote, to have their children
returned, to receive citizenship rights and so on.
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