White myth-making and a State of Denial

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By Gary Foley, April 4, 2012

Members of the audience at Federation Square turn their backs on Opposition Leader Brendan Nelson after the national apology. (AAP IMAGE/JULIAN SMITH)

NATIONAL: White Australia must first develop a greater awareness of the issues confronting Aboriginal Australia before we can advance, writes GARY FOLEY*.

White Australia has a Black History, but it also has a long history of denial of that fact.

It also has an extensive track record of carefully constructing and reinforcing its own mythologies that help to maintain its denialism.

But we don’t really have to go far back into history to gain an understanding of how white Australia creates and embeds its own mythologies, we have examples happening around us right here and now.

A classic example of a current myth in the process of being assembled and propagated can be seen in the description of events at the Aboriginal Embassy on January 26th this year as a ‘riot’.

It should come as no surprise that the commercial media should enthusiastically embrace this inaccurate description, but even the once respected ABC News has now taken to using this term on every occasion the events of January 26th are mentioned in its news bulletins.

Yet eyewitness reports and even the television footage of that day are clear evidence that suggestions that there was some sort of Aboriginal ‘riot’ are pure fantasy.

But White Australian ‘journalists’ appear determined to maintain the lie that what happened was our Prime Minister was under grave threat from some sort of Aboriginal riot.

However, it is obvious from the television images that the only threat to Julia Gillard that day was from paranoid, over-zealous police officers manhandling her in a most undignified way.

And was that a smile I saw on Gillard’s face as I saw her being closely cuddled by that large and manly police officer?

That otherwise seemingly intelligent purveyors of information can so blatantly misrepresent what the television images clearly show is a remarkable illustration of a myth in the process of being constructed.

It should prompt us to think about other recent examples of myths that have now become embedded as part of the continuing denialism that pervades Australians perceptions of themselves and us.

Two of the worst examples that immediately spring to mind are the myth that the Mabo Decision of the High Court in 1992 and the subsequent Native Title Act 1993 gave “land justice” to Aboriginal people, and that Kevin Rudd has apologised to the Aboriginal people.

Australians like to cite these two ‘facts’ as evidence that this nation has progressive policies in relation to Aboriginal people.

When the Native Title Act (NTA) was passed in Parliament it was hailed as a great moment for Aboriginal Australia (amid the clinking of champagne glasses) by the then Prime Minister Paul Keating and his retinue of Aboriginal “advisors” who had “negotiated” the deal with him (key ones being Marcia Langton, Noel Pearson and Pat Dodson).

Noel Pearson was particularly effusive of the Act back in 1993, after all he was one of its main creators, but by February 2010 he had done a double back-flip now describing the NTA as “a travesty and a quagmire” as he accused the judicial system of “failing to serve Indigenous Australians”.

This about-face by Pearson was possibly because he had finally come to realise what Michael Mansell and I had said in 1993, which was that the Native Title Act was a fraud and a farce and certainly did not give land justice to Aboriginal Australians.

Yet most Australians cling to the belief that their country had resolved Aboriginal claims for land and sovereignty through the passing of the Native Title Act in 1993. This is white Australian myth-making and denialism of a high order.

Then we have the famous “apology” by Kevin Rudd in 2008.

This is already firmly embedded in white mythology as “Kevin Rudd’s apology to the Aboriginal people” and is viewed (at least by ALL in the mainstream media) as a cathartic event that has now absolved White Australia for past misdeeds and was therefore an important step towards an intangible creature called “reconciliation”.

These notions belie the truth. The fact is that Kevin Rudd did not apologise to the “Aboriginal people”, but rather to a small segment of the Aboriginal community known as the “Stolen Generations”.

This may well have been good news for those who were of the Stolen Generations, but Rudd’s intricately constructed and carefully worded apology deftly avoided apologising to ALL Aboriginal peoples.

But that didn’t matter because Canberra’s spin-doctors and the Parliamentary Press Gallery instantly misconstrued it into a general apology and that was that.

We now again have the ABC news service repeating this myth on a daily basis, and the not so subtle falsification of history continues unchallenged.

But as most Aboriginal people know, the apology ultimately served the purpose of appeasing the guilt of White Australia, rather than bringing about any meaningful change in the circumstances of most Black Australians.

What we are seeing happening around us is a perfect example of how myths are manufactured and embedded in a society’s sub-consciousness through mass media, government propaganda and the education system and then become accepted “truths” of history.

This is why it is so important for Aboriginal people and their genuine white supporters to remain ever vigilant to the lies and distortions that creep into mainstream society’s perceptions of itself.

If we too get sucked in by some of the white-mans mythology we can become our own worst enemies.

It is only through an informed, rational and intelligent public debate that we can really counter some of the dangerous myths that are being created in our midst.

And we can only have such a debate when all Australians have a greater awareness of the real situation that confronts Aboriginal peoples and when they are able to see through many of the lies that currently constitute Australian ‘history’.

Can this ever happen? I am not sure, but somehow I doubt it.

* Gary Foley has over the past 40 years been an activist, actor, academic, arts bureaucrat, museum curator and writer, and today describes himself as an “elderly anarchist agitator”, as well as being a historian and lecturer at Victoria University. Gary is currently completing a PhD in History at the University of Melbourne.

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13 thoughts on “White myth-making and a State of Denial

  1. In my opinion the real problem which comes form this country are people who identify themselves as “insert subrace here” first and not just as Australians,. My self im an Australian first, Western Australian Second. not asian, arab, christian, muslim, aboriginal, jew, nasi, buddist, or any other .

    If everyone did that then, i think there would be fewer problems.

    No sector of the community should have more or less rights than anyone else.

    • Interesting that you would point that out Frederick St. Claire since when I am applying for home/car loans, bank accounts, Govt paperwork etc I am required to identify as Aboriginal and NOT Australian. It is compulsory that we are segregated not self identified. I’m Aussie, some call me a hillbilly, bogan, ocker etc however I am Aboriginal. I’m pretty open-minded so didn’t make a career out of being a Black Activist like the younger-appearing Stolen Generation however.

  2. I am not sure ‘white’ Australia needs to be absolved of anything. I had nothing to do with past misdeeds, and have never discriminated against an Aboriginal. I am not apologetic.

    But I am sorry about relevant parts of our history. Sorry in the same way I am sorry about senseless deaths in Syria or Ethiopia.

    ‘White’ Australia should not feel guilty. We should all accept what happened and focus on ways to improve equality today.

  3. An article from an activist, actor,”art bureaucrat” whatever the hell that is and a museum curator, who hasn’t even finished his indoctrination from university, oops sorry degree in left wing ideology and anti-white affairs. Makes out that the gestures of the government done with no mandate from the people because we had no say in the matter in the form of a formal referendum question on the matters, especially slippery KRUDDS sycophantic apology to a generation who were not stolen but misguidedly placed in care when their dysfunctional stone age parents didn’t have the skills to raise them in an even remotely civilised way. Somehow was an appeasement to our guilt? I for one feel no guilt for a portion of society who have had the power of that supposed guilt, that only bleeding heart lefties work themselves into a lather over, to hold over everyone they disagree with or who don’t subscribe to their version of events. There is a whole industry built around aboriginal “issues”, that sees obscene amounts of taxpayer money thrown at it to appease the agitators, and the ones taking advantage of what many aboriginal feel are genuine grievances, but the root causes are never addressed, too much money to be made, so the problem must be perpetuated to keep the guilt trip dollars rolling in. True equality will only be achieved when the sponges are taken out of the equation, the parallel provision of services to aborigines is abolished and the quota’s and special incentives to employ aborigines are taken away, how is it fair for an employer to employ a less skilled worker who is aboriginal over a non aboriginal worker because the employee gets $6,000 in incentive payments to take that person on? Best person for the job, regardless of colour or any other criteria, and if aborigines claim it is cultural to shun school and getting an education to enable them to apply for jobs on an equal footing, have to take there chances like every other lazy bastard here in the same position regardless of race, to say events over 200 years ago allow for them to be slack and not go to school and all that appeasement rubbish is just that, rubbish, perpetuating the cycle of hand out mentality and under achievement in aborigines.

    • The above comment brought to you by yet another whingey white man from the redneck invader class with an over-inflated sense of entitlement and privilege, a patently fake e mail address and cheap nationalist nickname and a raft of racist observations pretending to be fact-based.

      In other words, the usual bogot rubbish.

      Weren’t you calling yourself “Mick Prior” before? The “prior” referring to a criminal record no doubt.

      • Yeah Mick is the name… I have a small dick, as you haven’t seen it, and penile references don’t faze me, I am a big boy I can take it lol, lets see, anything else? no, can’t think of anything, I am not homosexual…. Hey what is tl;dr, just curious, is it left code for I think he is hot but can’t say publicly?

        [ADMIN: Comment truncated because it is boring, irrelevant and pointless]

        • “tl;dr” is a polite way of saying you are boring and off-topic.

          Two things to note:

          1. Straight or gay, we don’t care. Obviously you do. Notwithstanding, we have no respect for Fascists.

          2. Never assume we are kids. A mistake many have made and regretted it.

        • “what is tl;dr”??

          Learn to Google, dude. Do you need someone to hold your hand when you walk down stairs, as well?

  4. @A Pool of Thoughts – I agree, the white population of Australia doesn’t need to apologise for past atrocities. The apology to the stolen generation was from the Federal Government to those affected by their forced adoption policies. It was not, as some bigots like to complain, a blanket apology from Us to Them. You and I weren’t around 50, 100, 200 years ago, and individually can’t pretend to claim responsibility for the terrible things that occurred – we had nothing to do with it.

    The white population of Australia does need to apologise, however, for the current and continuing inequality faced by the Aboriginal population at large. We can agree on that.

  5. Good thought provoking article here – I must admit I had thought Rudd’s apology was more than just to the Stolen Generations. Didn’t realise and have learnt from this. Thanks.

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