Advocate, March 2020

Page 15

WERTE! ◆

Invasion Day rallies call for real recognition Over the past five or so years, Invasion Day rallies across the country have grown to a point where, in some cities, the attendance numbers far outstrip the numbers seen at official Australia Day gatherings. NTEU has for many years supported the right to assert sovereignty and the right to self-determination for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander members and community and thus has proudly supported the Invasion Day rallies. Many of our members were seen in the numbers across the country which in some areas exceeded 50,000 people. Yet year after year, the mainstream media and conservative politicians ensure the public remain misinformed about Invasion Day and what its aims are. Think-pieces detailing alleged pushes to 'Change the Date', even though most rally organisers around the country actively reject that idea in preference for real recognition of sovereignty and land rights, dominate the papers. Politicians additionally bend over backwards to reinforce nationalism and it’s important to note that in 2020, this has reached a new farcical level – the Morrison Government is spending several million dollars to send a replica Endeavour around Australia

undertaking a circumnavigation which never happened in honour of the 250th anniversary of James Cook’s landing on the eastern seaboard. Yet it must be noted that far from a call to 'Change the Date', Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been protesting on 26/1 since 1938 – more than 50 years before Australia Day became a gazetted public holiday. What started with the Day of Mourning action has gone through a number of iterations over the years – including the 1988 Convergence, Survival Day events and of course the protests. Regardless of the label, the message that we have survived and we’re going nowhere resonates strongly. Australia has a long way to go before it reconciles with its own past and recognises the rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Even in our learned institutions, racism and erasure are still a normal experience for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander workers, as the NTEU’s I’m still not a racist, but… report details. Western supremacy dictates which knowledges, life experiences and teaching styles are deemed valid and which are secondary.

was terra nullius 250 years ago still very much permeates not only our institutions but also the national psyche. Last year at NTEU National Council, a motion was passed for the repatriation of artefacts and remains, access to our knowledges so often stored wrongfully under white lock and key, and for the proper respect to be shown to traditional owner groups as these knowledge holders. Recognition of knowledge, recognition of land and recognition of sovereignty is key to the struggle fought not just on Invasion Day but every day of the year. When we see the numbers of supporters growing, we cannot help but think that perhaps the tide is turning and more people are interested in knowing the true history of this land and rectifying the wrongs. 250 years is a long time to be ignoring the obvious. Until this shifts, we can expect Invasion Day protests to continue. ◆ Celeste Liddle, National A&TSI Organiser Image: Celeste Liddle (right) at the Melbourne Invasion Day rally, 26 Jan 2020. Brendan Bonsack

A key part of combatting this ignorance is education and the valuing of these knowledge systems, as Cook’s idea that this land

ADVOCATE VOL. 27 NO. 1 ◆ MARCH 2020

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Articles inside

New NTEU staff Updating your membership details

3min
pages 54-56

Casual/sessional fee increase delayed due to coronavirus

1min
page 52

Qld Division goes solar & funds APHEDA Upcoming Friday Sessions for members

1min
page 53

Farewell from over the Ditch

4min
page 51

Sylvia Klonaris, CDU

3min
page 50

Kate Mattingly, UniSA

3min
page 49

Liberals’ digital ascendancy

4min
page 48

The surreptitious infiltration of private interests in public education

5min
pages 46-47

Faith no more

5min
pages 44-45

QUTE Conference 2020: Our Voice @ Work & Beyond

5min
pages 37-39

Who's out at work?

5min
pages 42-43

Working late, weekends and poolside

4min
page 36

Stop supercharging climate change

8min
pages 34-35

Unions must declare a climate emergency

7min
pages 32-33

Scientists' warning ignored for decades

4min
page 26

Bushfires spark green shoots of solidarity

9min
pages 27-29

Safe as Houses: Climate change & the Australian Dream

6min
pages 30-31

Where are we at with academic freedom?

3min
page 21

It gets a little bit lonelier each week

3min
page 17

Free and equal

5min
pages 22-23

Gerd case not over yet

2min
page 20

Invasion Day rallies call for real recognition

2min
page 15

Babies, breastfeeding and bargaining

3min
page 10

Waging war against wage theft in higher education

3min
page 8

Merry Christmas and a No, No, No

1min
page 11

Round 7 enterprise bargaining complete

2min
page 7

COVID-19 exposes sector’s vulnerability

3min
page 6

Adding up wage theft in Maths & Stats

4min
page 9

Scorched summer reminds us: climate change is union business

4min
page 4

Screening The Final Quarter across Qld

3min
page 14
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