As a nation, we’ve rarely done right by our Aboriginal brothers and sisters.
But while the crimes committed against the original inhabitants of our country can never be truly ‘made up’ for, our political leaders have done a little bit better in recent years than they did in the decades that preceded them.
In 1975, Gough Whitlam poured dirt into the hands of Vincent Lingiari, as he handed the land of Wave Hill station back to the Gurindji people.
In 1992, Paul Keating delivered the historic ‘Redfern’ speech, which proved to be a turning point for race relations in this country and a trigger for broader acceptance by white Australians for the wrongs of the past.
In 2008, Kevin Rudd said “sorry” for the acts of previous government in forcibly removing the Indigenous children now known as the Stolen Generation from their homes.
And, in 2014, our current Prime Minister Tony Abbott said this:
“I guess our country owes its existence to a form of foreign investment by the British government in the then unsettled or, um, scarcely settled, Great South Land.”
Yep, that actually just happened.
In a single a sentence the Prime Minister dismissed 40,000 odd years of Aboriginal culture, history and beliefs; claiming that Australia was ‘unsettled’ before European arrival.
We’re not sure what’s worse, the fact that Mr Abbott believes the outdated and historically inaccurate notion that Australia was ‘unsettled’ prior to Captain Cook’s lot showing up, or that Mr Abbott felt correcting himself with ‘scarcely settled’ would somehow make us all nod in agreement and forgive him instantly for the error.