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G’day from Gary Gray

AUSTRALIA’S AMBASSADOR IN IRELAND

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Australian Embassy, Ireland

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Australia Day is about the future and the past

Last month, all of Australia was in celebration with the announcement our government has acquired copyright to the Australian Aboriginal flag so it can be used freely by all. Since it was first used in a demonstration in 1971, it has grown to become a symbol of indigenous unity and pride. This announcement came on the week we celebrate Australia Day and is fitting of the new and multifaceted nation we have become.

Of course our journey has not been smooth sailing. On January 26th, 1788, Arthur Phillip arrived at what is now Sydney Cove, Australia and raised the national flag of the United Kingdom. In doing so, he founded the British colony of New South Wales and, at the same time, commenced the dispossession and marginalisation of Indigenous people who have occupied the land for at least 60,000 years. This is now, a sad and undisputed reality which it took much too long for the Australian people to acknowledge. During this time, many Indigenous people were removed from their traditional lands and stopped from practicing their language and culture by the burgeoning administration. This is an enduring hurt that still has consequences in modern Australia today. It is understandable therefore why some Irish people in Australia and here in Ireland might wonder why our annual national celebration of Australia Day marks this occasion.

When considering this question, it is important to recognise what we are celebrating and why. Though not everything is perfect in contemporary Australia, Australia ranks as one of the best countries to live in the world by international comparisons of wealth, education, health and quality of life. This is something we are and will continue to be proud of. As well as these very tangible measurements, Australia legislated to legalise samesex marriage in 2017 and continues to be one of the most multicultural societies in the world.

Australians carry our weight and more in the great challenges of the world. We will meet and exceed our Paris Climate Targets for example, and we strongly support the net zero emissions by 2050 pledge made at COP26. More recently we have, and will continue to support our Pacific neighbours in their ongoing response to covid-19 by helping in the logistical distribution and donation of vaccines. These are achievements of our modern, strong and diverse

democracy and that is what we celebrate on January 26th. There is simply no way to deny that the story of modern Australia; its rule of law, equality of the sexes, scientific curiosity, technological progress, its responsible government and the reflectiveness that makes us conscious of our failings towards Aboriginal people started from this date. For in all walks of life, one’s response to adversity demonstrates the content of one’s character and while we look back with deep regret, we must also look forward.

Ireland’s President Michael D. Higgins understood this concept intrinsically when he made an historic apology to the Aboriginal people of Australia in 2017 when he visited Perth. While recognising the hardship of Irish arrivals to the British colony, President Higgins said, “If we are to be truly unblinking in our gaze, we must acknowledge that while most Irish emigrants experienced some measure - often a large measure - of prejudice and injustice, there were some among the number who inflicted injustice too.”

A country’s national holiday is not designed therefore to reflect the values at the time of its origin, nor is it supposed to be an unfiltered celebration of everything that has ever happened within the state or by its people since that time. St. Patrick’s Day for example was introduced by the British Government in 1903 after James O’ Meara MP brought it before the House of Commons. However when Irish people take to the streets in 2022 to celebrate the day, thoughts will not be of 1903 and James O Meara, nor of 461AD and the death of the Welsh man, St. Patrick. Their thoughts will not be of how women were treated in 5th Century Ireland, nor of how Ireland had yet to gain its independence from the United Kingdom in 1903. Instead, reflections will consider how its people have used their time and resources since then to build the modern Republic we see today: A Republic to be proud of and to be celebrated.

In Australia that is our desire as well. None of this is supposed to take away from the immeasurable suffering but rather to recognise and understand better the traditional owners of country throughout Australia, and their continuing connection to land, sea and community. We pay our respects to them and their cultures, and to elders past, present and emerging by seeking a new and modern nation state that brings together all of its people into a single shared vision. Nations are like people, we all go through a personal growth journey, reconciling who we were with who we are is part of a journey, it’s a journey to who we want to be. So Australia is on a difficult journey, on a pathway of our making, it’s a journey of growth.

OUR PAST CONTAINS SADNESS AND PAIN, WE MUST OWN THAT AND BY DOING SO, WE WILL GROW. THIS IS MODERN AUSTRALIA AND JANUARY 26, 1788 WAS THE MOMENT WHERE THE JOURNEY TO OUR MODERN AUSTRALIA BEGAN. I HOPE EVERYONE ENJOYED A HAPPY AUSTRALIA DAY. ☘

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