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Thyla

(791 posts)
Mon Mar 4, 2019, 05:13 AM Mar 2019

The Killing Times: the massacres of Aboriginal people Australia must confront

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/mar/04/the-killing-times-the-massacres-of-aboriginal-people-australia-must-confront


The truth of Australia’s history has long been hiding in plain sight.

The stories of “the killing times” are the ones we have heard in secret, or told in hushed tones. They are not the stories that appear in our history books yet they refuse to go away.

The colonial journalist and barrister Richard Windeyer called it “the whispering in the bottom of our hearts”. The anthropologist William Stanner described a national “cult of forgetfulness”. A 1927 royal commission lamented our “conspiracy of silence”.

But calls are growing for a national truth-telling process. Such wishes are expressed in the Uluru statement from the heart. Reconciliation Australia’s 2019 barometer of attitudes to Indigenous peoples found that 80% of people consider truth telling important. Almost 70% of Australians accept that Aboriginal people were subject to mass killings, incarceration and forced removal from land, and their movement was restricted.


There is also an interactive map which shows the locations of some of the conflicts. It is disturbing but something as the headline states, we must confront.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/ng-interactive/2019/mar/04/massacre-map-australia-the-killing-times-frontier-wars

And on a personal level it is entirely fair to say that this history has been hidden from most Australians, whether that is willfully or just buried out of shame or forgotten. Schools never taught such history beyond a cursory glance and whilst it is slightly better today the level of detail is low.
And lets be honest, if you have colonial ancestry in Australia just how much do you really know what happened back then. I know I have distant settler relatives, I have looked into it somewhat but little info is available from where I am and will likely have to pay a proper historian/genealogist to really get into more detail.

I wish ancestry was a little bit easier to navigate because I know I have found some saved letters stating a few interesting tidbits.
With that said I know we underestimate the hurt and suffering the Aboriginal people still feel today and we owe them soooo much more than we have shown. Maybe a clearer understanding of the past is at the very least a step in the right direction because if government won't act then it is up to the people to show some humanity and given the Australia Day controversy we seem a long way off of reconciliation.
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The Killing Times: the massacres of Aboriginal people Australia must confront (Original Post) Thyla Mar 2019 OP
a national disgrace rampartc Mar 2019 #1
Yep. We did it to Native Americans. SunSeeker Mar 2019 #2
the normans did it to the saxons rampartc Mar 2019 #3

rampartc

(5,388 posts)
1. a national disgrace
Mon Mar 4, 2019, 06:32 AM
Mar 2019

but it has happened to less technologically advanced cultures since the first hominid figured out he could pick up a rock.

SunSeeker

(51,520 posts)
2. Yep. We did it to Native Americans.
Mon Mar 4, 2019, 06:56 AM
Mar 2019

The Japanese did it to the native population on Japan's islands.

rampartc

(5,388 posts)
3. the normans did it to the saxons
Mon Mar 4, 2019, 07:02 AM
Mar 2019

and the saxons did it to the britans.

none of which makes it a decent way for humans to act. perhaps in the future a united federation of some sort will issue a "prime directive...."

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