Reconciliation
Our
vision is for a united Australia, which respects this land of ours;
values the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander heritage; and provides
justice and equality for all.
Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation
When
the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody was released
in 1991, the extent of inequality between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
people was once again made clear. Aboriginal people as a group continued
to have the poorest health in the country; the highest unemployment
and the lowest education rates; Aboriginal people were also vastly
over represented in the prison population. The final recommendation
of the Royal Commission called on the federal government to establish
a process to improve relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
Australians.
After
lots of pressure from various community groups and individuals the
federal government voted completely in support of the Council for
Aboriginal Reconciliation Act. The Council immediately began working
towards healing. The Council ran from 1991 until 2000 when it was
formerly closed. From this time on the work of reconciliation was
handed over to the community to continue. Groups and individual
people have been asked to get involved and go on their own journey
of healing.
The
process of reconciliation focuses on recognizing the pain and suffering
that has come out of 200 years of dispossession and inequality for
indigenous Australians. For many non-Aboriginal people the idea
of acknowledging the mistakes of the past is a difficult process.
The response can often be "it's in the past - lets leave it
there" or for the younger generation especially "why should
I be sorry? It had nothing to do with me." The process of apology
and rewriting histories is not about finger pointing or laying blame
– it is about having a history that is honest and tells everyone's
story. Whether we have anything to do with the past injustices is
not the point – this is the legacy we are left with.
The
process of healing 200 years worth of wounds will not happen with
a quick fix solution. If we can acknowledge this legacy, accept
it, then we can get involved, listen to each other and work to make
changes.
