Before the sad events in Sydney on Monday and Tuesday, I was going to introduce my brief reply to Warren Mundine, and to a lesser extent Eve Vincent, with the old Leunig cartoon of the bomb disposal exam, with students furiously jiggling wires while people blow up around them. Maybe not now, at least not unframed. But there isn’t much of an alternative to summing up the process of disentangling his defence of a proposal that was contradictory and confused in the first place. (Also worth noting that Bob Gosford defused Mundine when these suggestions first came up a year or so ago.)
Mundine’s reply can be found here. His original proposal, briefly, was that separate treaties be made with the 150-plus groups we currently identify as “nations”, rather than with a single indigenous people (or with two — Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders). I argued that a treaty, to have any meaning, had to be between the two groups who had recognised each other in the initial conflict.
Just as numerous peoples and nations came into unified being through conflict with a larger force — from the Gauls to the United States, born of 13 colonies, to the Palestinians — so too, a unified Aboriginal people had come into being from conflict with a settler state. The unity remains because the categorical political struggle remains. The Native Title Act didn’t extinguish claims on freehold title land for 30 of 150 nations — it did so for all native claims by all indigenous Australians. The 1967 referendum didn’t extend citizenship to all nations beginning with “K”. It was the Aboriginal Advancement League, and the Aboriginal Legal Service, not the Darug advancement league or the Kulin health service.
In response to my argument that this was a unification through a historical process, Mundine believes I am saying that “Aboriginal identity is — as you’ve acknowledged — a construct borne from the way other people looked at us, not the way we looked at ourselves”.
But this is exactly not what I am saying. I’m saying that the real, material historical processes of conflict, followed by self-organisation and struggle, were around collective Aboriginal being. And it is not how you are looked at, it’s how you self-organise that defines your material collective being. To take umbrage at the fact that this arises from an invasion by a more powerful adversary is silly.
In fact, Mundine’s construction of this is curiously passive. Here is how he portrays my argument:
“Aboriginal people are one people because they were all invaded by Great Britain. The British couldn’t tell the difference between the blackfellas they encountered as they spread out across the continent – they just conquered the lot of them. Those groups therefore became One Aboriginal People, defined by their relationship as invaded people to their invaders. But don’t take this as an insult.”
But of course whites didn’t just conquer blacks. There was a war, or a series of them, which went on for decades. Mundine leaves out all record of resistance. Yet it is only in the context of recognising the frontier wars as material, unifying events for Aborigines — even if hunter-gatherer social frameworks limited the ability for widespread co-ordination and command — that a treaty has any real meaning at all. If it is not a delayed recognition of a war between white and black, what possible meaning or worth can it have?
This gets to the heart of the contradiction of Mundine’s position. He takes umbrage at the suggestion that conflict with whites brought something — the treaty-party entity — into being, and insists on the autonomous existence of nations or mobs, who have meaning independent of any conflict or “other”:
“My Bundjalung ancestors were a people for more than 40,000 years before the British arrived, however much of a myth-making throw-back that may seem to you. So were my Gumbaynggirr and Yuin ancestors … All of these existed quite independently of the British. And these groups have no interest in being ‘defined against whites’. They aren’t defined against anyone. They just are.”
Well yes, I do think that trying to trace a cultural lineage back 40,000 years is myth-making. Also childishly stupid, and obviously meaningless, but more of that in a minute. Here’s the kicker.
“I want my tribal nations recognised. Not as an invaded peoples. But as peoples and nations in their own right.”
So on the one hand Mundine wants to assert that such nations just are, autonomous and by virtues of their heritage. Yet he wants them recognised. By whom? By the white settler state. The capitulation to recognition by an other thus becomes part of Mundine’s treaty process. Good thing he has three of these indivisible nations, with their geologic-scale time heritage, to fall back on.
Whatever the existence of the Aboriginal nations may be, they weren’t entities per se in the struggles and creations that a treaty now would be referring back to. So to suddenly insert them into the process, where there has been no recognisable groundswell to do so, seems trivialising. Buried in Mundine’s position is a Eurocentrism whereby Aboriginal society can only be real if its distinct forms are assimilated to European forms, but it would take too long to unpack it here.
The point is that any treaty now would only have real bite if there were a transfer of sovereignty attached — if a Nunavut-style state/territory were being created, a shift in material power. Absent of that, a treaty starts to develop the same dimension of symbolic politics that has dominated the last two decades and more of race politics in Australia. After all, to put it bluntly, treaties only have meaning when the former belligerents have a mutual interest in suing for peace, even amid uneven odds. Waitingi meant something because the British needed to consolidate occupation of Aotearoa/New Zealand, for wider strategic reasons.The British made a treaty with the nascent United States because they didn’t want to risk losing Canada.
There is nothing in Australian black/white history to hang that on, since the defeat was total, and the expanding Australian state was never militarily threatened. A treaty only has a chance at meaning something if its principal act is to retroactively establish the frontier wars as a unified thing, rather than as an isolated series of skirmishes, crimes and massacres. If it becomes some sort of attempt to turn the occupation of the continent into a matter of agreement, then it is a ghastly reversal of intent. Whatever the case, as with the apology and constitutional recognition, it is a task that directs a lot of activist energy at petitioning the white state to grant identity. How much more of this would people like to do exactly?
The objection above — that any treaty should have reference to the process that led up to it, which has been one of Aborigines defining themselves as one people — also applies to Eve Vincent’s criticism of my argument. Vincent argues that such collectivity was chiefly of the period of the ’60s and ’70s. That strikes me as plain wrong, given that Aborigines were defined collectively, initially by the white state and then in struggle against that by collective organisations such as the AAL and others.
That’s more than a century all told. Vincent argues that Aboriginal people are gaining meaning from re-identifying with their particular heritage, languages etc. That’s great, but the topic centred round the question of a treaty, and what entities might be party to them. My central contention is that Mundine’s arguments are internally contradictory and incoherent as regards any sort of treaty that could be meaningful, so I don’t think any given type of aboriginality is being constructed in unknotting them. Besides, if a treaty is to be something other than a one-way charitable award then the other side – even if it has been the oppressor – has a legitimite say in who they are striking the treaty with. And as one on that side, I’m saying that agreeing to treaties with 150+ groups of varying historical and geographical solidity would be to be party to an absurdity.
Whether to emphasise collective unity or difference is a question for indigenous people obviously. But even if one choose difference, opposing forces may not agree. The Western Australian government isn’t closing down — i.e. expelling — loss-making remote communities on a case-by-case basis. It is doing so en masse, with a few reprieves, so it is a “collective” or general extinguishment of particularity. The Northern Territory communities will be next — when they can work out a disguised way to do it in the same manner. The Right has been pushing for these expulsions for years, and now it has governments willing to do them. T’were me, faced with such a unitary and annihilating state, it wouldn’t be the time I’d choose to emphasise difference. Nor would I want the conversation led by a man who works for the Prime Minister doing them — a Prime Minister who believes that the country was unsettled before 1788 and appears determined to restore significant parts of it to that fantasy state.
If Mundine wants each Aboriginal nation to make a treaty, can I then demand that these nations make individual treaties with the Coyle clan, the MacGregors, my Norman ancestors and the Roman Empire?
I have no doubt that the existence of individual Aboriginal nations, tribes, clans, language groups and such is important, all our cultural backgrounds serve to give us identity. That does not mean that it makes any sense to work out how we go into the future based on historical tribal, linguistic or nationalistic groups. We need to be pragmatic at some point.
The Aboriginal Peoples of Australia need to operate collectively intra-nationally and to also cooperate internationally with other First Nations people. However there is clearly a need to have specific Treaties with each one of the circa 150 Aboriginal groups surviving of the 350-750 in 1788.
Before the British Invasion in 1788, Indigenous Australians had been living in Australia for about 60,000 years. There were 350-750 different tribes and a similar number of languages and dialects, of which only 150 survive today and of these all but about 20 are endangered. After the British Invasion, the Aboriginal population dropped from about 1 million in 1788 to about 0.1 million in the first century through introduced disease, deprivation and genocidal violence. The last massacres of Aborigines occurred in the 1920s but no Treaty has ever been signed. Indigenous Australians were only counted after a referendum in 1967 and were finally given some protection by the 1975 Racial Discrimination Act brought in by Labor PM Gough Whitlam before he was removed in a CIA-backed Coup on 11 November 1975. In the 20th century up to 1 in 10 Aboriginal children were forcibly removed from their mothers, the so-called Stolen Generations, a process that is continuing .
In 2000 about 9,000 Aborigines out of an Aboriginal population of 500,000 died avoidably every year (an avoidable death rate of 1.8% pa, the highest in the world) but this had declined to about 2,000 annual avoidable deaths out of a population of about 670,000 by 2011 (0.4% pa, similar to that in impoverished South Asia but occurring in one of the world’s richest countries). Indigenous Australians are far worse off than White Australians in relation to housing, health, wealth, social conditions, employment, imprisonment, deaths in custody, infant mortality, avoidable death rate, and life expectancy. While Aborigines represent 3% of the Australian population, they represent about 30% of the Australian prison population. In 2008 Labor PM Kevin Rudd made his famous official “Sorry” to the Aboriginal Stolen Generations who had been forcibly removed from their mothers. However in that speech PM Rudd made no mention of racism or genocide and failed to mention the massive, continuing removal of Aboriginal children from their mothers that is now at record levels (see “Palestinian Genocide”: https://sites.google.com/site/palestiniangenocide/ ; Gideon Polya, “ Ongoing Aboriginal Genocide And Aboriginal Ethnocide By Politically Correct Racist Apartheid Australia ”, Countercurrents, 16 February 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya160214.htm ; “Aboriginal Genocide” : https://sites.google.com/site/aboriginalgenocide ; and Gideon Polya, “Film Review: “Utopia” by John Pilger exposes genocidal maltreatment of Indigenous Australians by Apartheid Australia”, Countercurrents, 14 March, 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya140314.htm ) .
Apartheid Australia and Apartheid Australia-backed Apartheid Israel have appalling, continuing records of violating the human rights of their Indigenous Peoples through the continuing Australian Aboriginal Genocide and the continuing Palestinian Genocide, respectively, and must be held to account by the civilized world through Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) for their genocidal crimes and for currently violating all 46 Articles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Indeed the ABSENCE of Treaties in both cases demand UN intervention against both genocidal and International Law-violating Apartheid regimes for unilateral theft as well as genocide (see Gideon Polya, “Apartheid Israel And Apartheid Australia Violate All Articles Of UN Declaration On The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples:, Countercurrents, 13 November 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya131214.htm ).
Maybe, Indigenous people don’t necessarily see themselves as one unified body, or group?
But, what are we talking about here. A NATIONAL referendum on the recognition of Indigenous people into the Australian Constitution doesn’t have to assume that among Indigenous people themselves, that THEY would need to be in consensus on this.
Indigenous people don’t make up the majority of the population of Ausralia who would ultimately vote on it.
Isn’t this a discussion about two separate things which have become, unsurprisingly, intertwined.?
The Aboriginal peoples are decended from & to some degree remain, a group of people from historical tribes & nations and just as Stuart Coyle mentioned above, the same could be said of the ‘incomers’ over the last couple of centuries.
That is fact, is worthy of recognition, but isn’t much use in a treaty with the whole of the Aboriginal people & the whole of the rest of Australia.
The Aboriginal people should speak with one collective voice on this issue.
There is no reason why, within the overall negotiations, any number of ‘special-cases’ could not be included, to take account of various circumstances one or all of the Aboriginal nations have or had.
This though, is not a reason to have 150+ separate treaties.