Remembering the Frontier Wars and striving for systemic change

June 8, 2022
Issue 
Image: Myall Creek massacre by Vincent Serico in the National Museum of Australia

The Anthony Albanese-led Labor government has reignited hope that First Nations peoples will be聽included in the decision-making process. But the lasting impact of colonisation, embedded in how laws are applied, also聽has to be addressed.

While 丑补蝉听聽to enshrine a First Nations voice to parliament and commit to the Uluru Statement from The Heart, on how exactly justice will be delivered.

As Gomeroi woman and聽caretaker of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on June 2, how will changing the constitution 鈥渂enefit us as Aboriginal people鈥.

It is vital the new government listens to First Nations peoples, for whom 鈥渞econciliation鈥 has not delivered. 鈥淔or 30 years we鈥檝e been reconciling, 232 years we鈥檝e been reconciling,鈥 Stanley said. 鈥淲hy are we still trying to integrate into a system that systemically聽oppresses us?鈥

One of the latest examples of this structural oppression is the case of 19-year-old Kumanjayi Walker鈥檚 murder by Northern Territory police officer Zachary Rolfe in 2019.

Rolfe was the聽first police officer to stand trial for murder since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody in 1991. A coronial inquest will take place in September, but an all-white jury has already handed down a not-guilty verdict.

There have been more than 500 Black deaths in custody since that Royal Commission.

On the eve of the Myall Creek massacre of 1838, where at least 28 Wirrayaraay people were killed by white stockmen and former convicts, it is timely to remember the legalised brutality that accompanied colonisation.

Researchers at the University of Newcastle have produced a of colonial frontier massacres from 1788 to 1930. More than 8300 people were killed in more than 300 massacres over that time, 97% of whom were First Nations people.

Settler diaries, journals, newspaper reports, court reports and personal testimonies helped uncover the truth. The researchers found that the majority of massacres were perpetrated on private property, such as at Myall Creek. They also found that a majority of the massacres were 鈥渟urprise attacks on Aboriginal camps at rivers, creeks and waterholes鈥.

Professor Lyndall Ryan, who has been working on the project since 2014, told that the map is 鈥渘ot definitive鈥 because so many massacres were 鈥渉idden鈥. 鈥淭he code of silence about massacres has been almost universal,鈥 she said.

Ryan also specified that many killings were not included in the map because fewer than six people had been murdered 鈥 the minimum number to be officially considered a massacre.

The , in north-east New South Wales, is one of the many recorded. After being killed, the Wirrayaraay people were piled up and burned.

Importantly, Myall Creek was the first time the perpetrators were convicted, with seven of the 12 murderers sentenced to death.

A Myall Creek memorial, erected in 2000, has now become a place of mourning and commemoration. Hundreds from across the country are expected to mark the anniversary on the June long weekend.

At a Myall Creek聽聽in Parramatta on April 30, Ngarrabul Gamilaraay Yuwaalaray Kooma woman Adele Chapman-Burgess criticised the 鈥渋gnorance鈥 of the frontier wars and called for people to be educated. Keith Munro, co-chair of the National Committee of the Friends of Myall Creek, said 鈥渆ffective reconciliation鈥 must come from an acknowledgement of the country鈥檚 鈥渢rue history鈥.

There is a direct link between the frontier massacres and police brutality today towards First Nations peoples.

In 1838, only months before the Myall Creek massacre, NSW mounted police commander Major James Nunn and his men聽 more than 50 Gamilaraay people at Waterloo Creek. He also encouraged nearby settlers to 鈥渕urder any Aboriginal people they came across鈥.

The NSW mounted police were to put down First Nations鈥 resistance to British colonising forces, and they have continued this role, threatening protesters at Invasion Day and Black Lives Matter rallies.

Breaking the 鈥渃ode of silence鈥 surrounding the treatment of First Nations peoples has to include fighting the structural racism that has contributed to the deaths of Kumanjayi Walker, Victoria Nelson,听David Dungay jnr,听TJ Hickey,听Tanya Day,听Wayne 鈥淔ella鈥 Morrison,听Tane Chatsfield, Patrick Fischer,听Jai Wright聽and others.

91自拍论坛 wants to help expose the horrific and ongoing treatment of First Nations people. You can help us by becoming a supporter and making a donation to the聽Fighting Fund.

[The Myall Creek Massacre memorial will take place at 9am, on June 12 at Myall Creek Hall. Click for details. A has been called on June 18 by Yuendumu Elders marking the anniversary of the NT Intervention and calling for no more police guns in First Nations communities.]

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