鈥淪udden arrival of an invader from another land, decimating populations, creating terror. Forces the population to make enormous sacrifices & completely change how they live in order to survive. COVID19 or Cook 1770?鈥
This by Victoria鈥檚 deputy Chief Health Officer Dr Annaliese van Diemen, posted on April 29, the 250th聽anniversary of聽Captain Cook鈥檚 arrival in Australia,聽provoked the right-wing warriors to demand that she be sacked.聽Right-wing politicians criticised van Diemen for starting a 鈥渃ulture war debate鈥 while rushing to make their own reactionary views known.
She continues in her role, but had to face an investigation by the state鈥檚聽public service watchdog to determine whether she had聽聽or聽鈥渦ndermined鈥 public confidence.
聽Van Diemen鈥檚 analogy was not disrespectful, divisive or, as some tried to argue, a distraction from the pandemic. It was an accurate acknowledgment of the colonisers鈥 violent dispossession and genocide of First Nations peoples and their survival despite that and the pandemics they brought.
Thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal government was forced to cancel its extravagant and ahistorical 鈥渃ommemoration鈥 of Captain James Cook鈥檚 arrival in the Pacific. The government had allocated聽聽for the occasion which, among other things, involved constructing a replica聽贰苍诲别补惫辞耻谤听to circumnavigate Australia, something Cook never did.聽
Neither did he 鈥渄iscover鈥 Australia.
In one small tweet,聽van Diemen聽demolished the right-wing culture warriors who had been looking forward to commemorating British invasion. Cook was not simply an explorer: he played a significant role in the British colonisers鈥 hostility to First Nations people. His own聽聽states that he fired his musket three times at two Dharawal men in what is now known as New South Wales.
Thousands of聽Aboriginal聽and Torres Strait Islander聽people died from diseases spread by British colonists, who were already immune to viruses such as smallpox. Countless massacres almost wiped out the entire Indigenous population, leaving survivors without family, land and resources, and changing their lives forever.
Aboriginal people continue to live with the devastating results of colonisation, with many communities disproportionately plagued by disease and early death. People who have been dispossessed deal with higher rates of unemployment, incarceration, suicide and a聽higher burden of chronic diseases. Aboriginal people often live in overcrowded accommodation where quarantining has been difficult. Concerns surrounding聽, which has been a problem for decades, became worse at the height of the COVID-19 emergency.
Hypocritically, Coalition politicians did their best to discredit van Diemen for sharing her opinion. But the mud didn鈥檛 stick, possibly because it was so apt.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said聽. Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton declared van Diemen 鈥渦nfit for that office鈥. Tasmanian Liberal Senator Eric Abetz said: 鈥淭his tortured, non-relevant attempted analogy may enhance her 鈥榳okeness鈥 credentials amongst the few but will leave the vast majority of Australians demanding a focus by her on the urgent task at hand鈥.
Politicians and senior public officials tweet messages unrelated to their jobs all the time and are not threatened with their sacking.
础产别迟锄鈥 on April 29 said: 鈥淭oday marks the 250th anniversary of Captain Cook鈥檚 landing at Botany Bay. In the words of renowned historian Geoffrey Blainey, Captain Cook 鈥榠ndirectly made possible present-day Australia which, despite its many failures, is surely one of the success stories of the world.鈥
The attacks on van Diemen are part of a right-wing culture war against acknowledging colonial dispossession and its ongoing legacy.聽聽
Van Diemen was prepared to speak the truth about Australia鈥檚 violent colonial past. While she had to delete Twitter from her mobile phone, that鈥檚 a small price to pay for such an onslaught against speaking the truth. Hopefully, her tweet inspires others to do the same, and raise public awareness about how colonial history has shaped today鈥檚 discrimination against First Nations peoples.