We need to acknowledge there are aspects of Aboriginal culture that need to be kept firmly in the past. No culture is static and unchanging, and the belief that Aboriginal culture needs to be frozen and preserved in time is preventing many Aboriginal people from moving forward and embracing modernity… It is time to abandon romanticised notions of Indigenous culture…
- Sara Hudson, in “Time to remove the rose-tinted glasses when it comes to Aboriginal culture”, Centre for Independent Studies, 8 July 2016.
The town of
Aurukun in Far North Queensland hits the news headlines every few years, for all
the wrong reasons – booze smuggling, communal violence, horrendous sexual
assaults, alarming child health statistics. It’s such a rough place and the
problems are so intractable that indigenous MP Billy Gordon, writing for The Australian (12 May 2016), called the
Aurukun area “the Afghanistan of Australia”.
Third-world scenes
from a first-world country
This year
has been another bad one so far. YouTube contains some delightful coverage of
street battles between youths (mainly of young women slugging it out – so
photogenic I’m sure!). The police (seen standing watching from the sidelines) were
reluctant to intervene – one was reported as saying that they preferred to “let
them sort things out their own way”, or words to that effect.
Not that it
takes much to spark off a brawl in a town where intertribal tensions run high,
but a contributing factor to the troubles earlier this year was happenings at
the local school. Control over schooling had been handed over to indigenous
leaders (effectively to Noel Pearson, a widely known Cape activist) who had
used the state and federal moneys made available to buy into a commercial
American system called ‘Direct Instruction’. To put it mildly, some people were
rather unhappy with the new curriculum – The
Guardian of 6 July 2016, in its reflective analysis, reported that
“Children [were learning] more about US than Australia and indigenous culture”.
Teachers, including the principal, were attacked by youths some of whom were wielding
weapons including machetes, and one took a swing at the principal with an axe.
Teachers were airlifted out in May (the place is inaccessible by road most of
the year, and then only by 4WD), the school was closed, and the kids were
farmed out to community centres where they were to learn ‘traditional
knowledge’.
The government
education authorities conducted a review of the school and decided to take the
reins back in hand. The school was reopened on the 11th of last
month. But there’s plenty more fun and games coming – one of the reportedly ‘controversial’
decisions made by the Queensland government being to bring back an Australian
curriculum and scale back the foreign import.
Aurukun is renowned for its sexual
laxity with the highest birth rate for very young girls (14 and under) in the country.
Girls – down to pre-teens – trade sex for grog and ciggies. One high-profile
case in 2007 involved nine males (three young men and six lads) who had
gang-banged a 10-year-old girl. ABC News of 13 Dec 2007 reported that the
Queensland Crown Prosecutor had described the incident as involving “consensual
sex in a non-legal manner and he called those involved ‘very naughty’” . The court was told that “many Aurukun
children had a precocious attitude towards sex” and a defence lawyer said that
"Their level of understanding as to appropriate sexual conduct isn't good
and maybe it's because of their experience in relation to other people within
the community, and their conduct isn't good" (The Age, 13 Dec 2007). Hence the judge told the defendants, "I
accept that the girl involved, with respect to all of these matters, was not forced,
and that she probably agreed to have sex with all of you” (The Australian, 10 Dec 2007). To cut a long story short, the
defendants were released after a slap on the wrist, there was an outcry, and
the case was reopened (Google it if you want the full run-down).
Now it should not have to take the
likes of me to tell a Crown Prosecutor and a judge that a 10-year-old simply cannot
give consent to sexual intercourse in law. So what’s going on here, other than
the obvious – which is that different standards are being applied on the basis
of race/‘culture’/’custom’ from those applied to other Australians? Andrew Bolt,
writing in the Herald Sun after the
first phase of the legal saga that saw the defendants released, posed the
pertinent question “If the boys were White, would the judge have let them
walk?” I’d like to add to that the question “If the girl had been White, would
there have been any credence given to her having ‘consented’?”
Little
would appear to have changed according to a perturbing report about endemic
child sexual abuse in the Far North region of Queensland (“Indigenous child sexual abuse detailed in Queensland government
report”, The Guardian, 12 March 2016). As Frank Pledge argues in his Quadrant article
“Indigenous culture and vile crimes” (8 November 2013),
In those remote communities remnant,
traditional culture relating to forced marriage of under-aged girls lent an air
of legitimacy to these otherwise illegal activities. In traditional
societies, girls under the age of legal consent were considered “available” to
be partners, with or without their own consent… These traditional practices, I
argue, could provide the template on which modern dysfunction has been built.
Cultural
relativists argue that all cultures are equal and therefore no culture is
superior to another, and so we cannot say that ‘White fella’s law’ is better
than ‘Black fella’s law’ and have no right to impose our ‘cultural’ norms on
other peoples. And yet it must rankle with even the most dogmatic cultural
relativist when very young girls are subjected to customs that amount to pack
rape (whether ostensibly ‘consensual’ or not).
Culture is
supposedly an adaptive mechanism and changes with altering circumstances. But
‘culture’ can also become a rut, and ‘cultural’ customs and attitudes can be so
entrenched that they become impediments to change and progress. Sometimes,
external intervention may be required to get things moving in the right
direction.
Whatever
our own ‘barbaric’ past, the Enlightenment was undeniably a product of Western
European thinking. It ushered in incendiary ideas such as universal human
rights that began making an impact outside Europe from the late 18th
century on. A shining example is slavery which was, for many millennia, deeply
embedded in just about every culture on the planet. The gradual erosion of the
slave trade (a seminal case was Somerset
1772) ending in the abolition of slavery in the mid-19th century is
just one of many instances where an externally imposed change produced positive
effects despite an initially ambivalent or even hostile reception on the basis
of the change going against custom/culture.
During the
colonial era, the authorities generally allowed native peoples to abide by
their cultural norms and practise their customs except where those practices
were deemed ‘abominable’, in which case the authorities cracked down on them.
This included such truly abominable practices as suttee (the burning alive of a widow on her dead husband’s funeral
pyre in India) and trading in shrunken heads with a good moko in NZ (the heads often being those of slaves or captives who
had been tattooed immediately prior to being butchered for the purpose). I have
yet to hear a cultural relativist telling us that we had no moral right to end such
quaint ‘cultural’ customs.
Late 19th-century
enlightened liberals such as Rudyard Kipling posited a moral imperative on the
part of the more advanced peoples (in the world of the time, Europeans) to give
the less advanced ones a helping hand up – the ‘White Man’s burden’. The idea
caught on and gave rise to social modernisation and mass education programmes –
often resisted by indigenous elites, who saw in such endeavours an emerging
threat to their power.
Late 19th-century cartoons. Top: The White Man’s
Burden. Note the beckoning arms of ‘Civilization’ top left, and the obstacles
John Bull and Uncle Sam are negotiating on behalf of their charges, including
‘oppression’, ‘brutality’ and ‘slavery’. Bottom: Education as the key to
advancement (note school house at top)
Australian Aboriginals have as much
right to the fruits of the Enlightenment as anyone else, and it is the duty of
national authorities to ensure that they have access to them. It is as well,
given today’s intellectual climate, that we don’t actually have to honour
Kipling’s imperative on a race-to-race basis. We have set up modern democratic
systems and we find not just ‘White men (and women)’ in parliament and in the
ministries but a mix of people of numerous descents (including indigenous).
Kipling’s moral imperative is now the duty of care of the modern State
towards underdeveloped populations within its jurisdiction. The mantra of self-determination
lets those in authority off the hook and provides a glib excuse for not only a
breach of this duty of care but also for State dereliction of duty with respect
to the rights of all citizens.
All Australians have a right to
security and protection from wanton violence. All Australians have a right to
protection from sexual exploitation. All Australians have a right to a quality
school education. The story of Aurukun
is an indictment of Australian national authorities who have on various
occasions abdicated their duty with regard to ensuring those rights.
Readers
will no doubt draw their own parallels with NZ. I can just imagine some of you
thinking, “They have Cape York, we have East Cape”. The good news is that
Ruatoria is streets ahead of Aurukun.
Barend Vlaardingerbroek BA, BSc,
BEdSt, PGDipLaws, MAppSc, PhD is associate professor of education at the
American University of Beirut and is a regular commentator on social and
political issues.
2 comments:
I certainly don,t know what the answer is, but the government needs to URGENTLY get a "think tank" together on this one.It is a most difficult problem as the aboriginals can be their own "worst enemy"!We must not let this deter us, though, as the problem has been "festering" for quite some time.Some "well meaning"tactics have been tried, as well as some not-so-well-meaning ones.My heart bleeds for them-I am sure there MUST be a way to handle this properly. I don't care what it costs- we MUST do it. Alcohol is one of the biggest road-blocks to success. I have been told they lack the (genetic) ability to process alcohol safely, like SOME white Ozzies.Also, I have been told that there have been instances of them being given a parcel of land to call their own, only to be moved on, when Gold, Opal,or uranium have been discovered on their land. I cannot state that this is true-but if it is-IT MUST STOP, AND LET WHATEVER IS DISCOVERED UNDER THEIR LAND BECOME THEIRS!! Peter Bell Australian living in NZ.
Barend does not spend his life in a cushy liberal pansy society, and so he will be familiar with people who have different cultural norms than we do here in New Zealand, and Australia..
He is questioning why with our precious recognition of the special people, within a Western nation, we come to tolerate rape, violence and drug type behaviour which we do not accept in people more similar to ourselves .
There is a comic picture by the artist Bill Leak in Australia. It is a picture of an Australian police man holding an obviously recalcitrant aborigine boy. And he says to a wiped out looking man..
“ Look, you are going to have to teach your son how to behave “ [ or similar ]
And the man replies “ Ok, but do you know what his name is
Well, it must be scary for a person like Bill Leak or Pauline Hansen. Because the attack mode from the liberal pansies is really something.
Apparently some of them are prepared to use violence against people who draw attention to violence.
Yes its the social justice warriors. Violence and abuse is totally intolerable unless it is tolerable.
Sexual and child abuse, and aberrant behaviour is not acceptable unless it is acceptable.
Social politics seems to say that you, that is you can be tried for a serious offence of violence, but I with my special genetic make up, I am protected by placement as one of the special people.
This is just as well . I should be able to do anything I like. I am special, its all your fault I am like this.
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