Tuesday, October 2, 2018

ABORIGINAL WARRIOR URGED NORTHERN TERRITORY STATEHOOD

Tucked away in a box of  interesting documents was the  above single  fold  pamphlet  handed out   on  National  Aborigines'  Day, July 14,1972, by the  National Aborigines'  Observance  Day Committee  ( NADOC ) . On opening it,  I was surprised to see it contained  the strong views of  the late  John Newfong   about  shortcomings   in   Australian  history  books .
 
 By Peter Simon
 
 With a magnificent speaking voice, he was described  as  the first Aboriginal employed  in mainstream print media  who acted   as a spokesman for the Aboriginal Tent Embassy  set  up  outside  parliament   house, Canberra.
   

Leader of the Federal  Opposition,Gough Whitlam, above ,  addressing the  Aboriginal  Tent Embassy on  January  26-Australia Day- 1972 . Tall ,  Newfong ,  second  from  the  left, in  suit and  tie ,  is standing near  media.
 
 Newfong  , of  the  Ngugi people of Moreton Bay, Queensland, was born in 1943 . His father   was Ben Archibald  "Archie" Nu Fong a champion Queensland heavyweight boxer , his  mother, Edna Crouch , a member  of  the  women's cricket team which played  England in 1935. 
 
John wanted to study law but  came up  against  a  barrier,  so   went to Mount Isa in 1965   as a miner .   In  Brisbane , he   took part in the   l967 Yes Vote  referendum  and also served as  campaign manager for the Queensland   Council for the Advancement  of Aboriginal and   Torres Strait Islanders .
    

He became  a  reporter on  the Sydney Morning  Herald  and   I  first met him  in Sydney  when I was  working on the Sun-Herald .   From  time  to  time , in his  impressive speaking voice ,  he  rang me at home  .  At  the  time  I  reported  on  a  penal reform    movement  in Sydney  and  the  aftermath of  the   1970   Bathurst  Gaol   rebellion  due to poor conditions in the old  institution. Prison officials  retaliated by bashing    prisoners, the event  becoming   known as   the  Bathurst  Bashings .  Newfong became involved with the Redfern Aboriginal Legal   Aid  Centre . In 1972  he edited  the   Aboriginal publication , Identity .

NAIDOC  said  it  invited " a  black Australian "-Newfong-   to  outline his view on  the "missing  section " of   the   nation's history books  for   the l972  pamphlet.  He opened saying   that   most anthropologists agreed Aboriginal people  came to  Australia from Southern Asia at least 30,0000 years ago. 

Opinion was divided in deciding the ethnic group  of  Aborigines.  While some  pointed to  very similar people in the Southern Indian  peninsula  and suggested  they had the same Caucasoid origins as the   rest of the Indo-Germanic people of the area, others  believed there  was  greater  evidence  to suggest  a  fourth and entirely separate group, the  Australoid .

In the case of Tasmanian Aborigines, it was thought  they had been in Australia possibly even longer than the mainland Aborigines . Like the people of Papua New Guinea  and the Torres Islands, they seemed   to have  been part of a negroid immigration from Africa  eastwards  towards the  Micro Melanesian part of the Western Pacific .
 
Mainland Aborigines had a social order and an ecological  culture  that was probably unique in the history of mankind . The Aboriginal people developed an intricate pattern of survival , their close communion with nature found expression in a religion  that was  essentially totemic.

European colonisation , for reasons of  health as much as the poisonings and massacres, "so often euphemised   in Australian history books" , resulted in  many being  wiped out . The only increase in the number of black people Australia promoted by European colonisers  was along the  coastal parts of Queensland   where a plantation society was established  with indentured  labour force   from the Western Pacific .
 
For a long time , he wrote , the old formula of "divide and conquer "was applied to  the Islanders  of  Queensland and  the local Aborigines , differentiation made between "full bloods" and " half-castes."
 
Since the l967 referendum , engineered  principally by the major national organisation, the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait  Islanders , there had been a  trend towards  a more grass roots   movement , and a feeling that a few black people  at the top of  the white man's world  was  just   not  enough . 
 
1970  saw the first  attempt to   form an  all-black grass roots   organisation-the National Tribal Council ; a month later , black Australians' first  international  press lobby  with  the Bi-Centenary  protest.
 
Since l970 , black organisations had sprung up over the country . People were no longer prepared to  be confined to camping areas  on the  outskirts  of country towns , poor and ragged  on the fringes  of the white man's world .As a result ,  black Australians   were involved  as never before .  
 
Newfong then went on to explain the importance of   setting up  the Aboriginal  Tent Embassy on  the lawn outside  parliament  house  on Australia Day , 1972 . It had been  established  to protest at  the fact that  black Australians were the only indigenes in the world  without  legal title to reserve lands, the only ones  to whom no form of compensation  had  been  paid .
 
It is interesting to read that another aim was to  obtain State   rights for the Northern Territory, so  that black Australians could have  a more proportionate say in Federal parliament , with members in  the House of Representatives and   six senators  to  which  the NT  as a state would be  entitled.
 
Figures  given to the  the Senate Committee on Social Environment  by the Department of the Interior in l972  indicated  black people in Territory   rural areas  were  in  a  62 percent  majority .
 
With political awareness increasing in the outback and electoral boundaries  favouring  rural electors , it seemed  more than  likely  that they would soon not merely  have the right to  a  say in  government , but also the means .    
 
A further riot took place  at the Bathurst Gaol   causing  $10million damage  in 1974 and  the  Nagle Royal  Commission  was subsequently held into NSW prisons.  One of the incredible stories which came out of the  riots was that at one tense  stage, when  armed police  were   facing  the   rioters ,  armed  with   makeshift weapons ,  holding captives,   the   group  representing  prisoners  in  tense negotiations  demanded  that The Spook, in the Wizard of Id  comic  strip  be released  from  the  dungeon .
 
John  Newfong,   who  went on to lecture  in journalism  and  media studies at  James Cook  University  , Townsville ,  died  of  cancer , in  1999.