Asia-Pacific News

Australia opens Parliament to Aboriginal culture

Feb 12, 2008, 2:52 GMT

Sydney - Australia took a further step in race relations Tuesday when mud-smeared Aboriginal elders staged the first-ever 'welcome to country' ceremony at the opening of a new session at Parliament House in Canberra.

On Wednesday, the first full day of Parliament, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd will offer the long-awaited official apology for a misguided assimilation programme that ran until the 1970s and saw black children taken from their parents to be brought up in white-run institutions.

A welcome-to-country ceremony is an indigenous equivalent of the 21-gun salute: it welcomes visiting dignitaries but stresses ownership of the land.

'A welcome-to-country acknowledges our people and pays respect to our ancestors' spirits who've created the lands,' Canberra woman and Ngunnawal tribe elder Matilda House Williams told the gathering. 'In doing this, the prime minister shows that we call proper respect, to us, to his fellow parliamentarians and to all Australians.'

She handed what Aborigines call a message stick to Rudd symbolizing the 'hope of a united nation through reconciliation.'

Receiving the message stick, Rudd said that Aborigines had occupied the continent for thousands of generations but Europeans for only for five, six or seven generations.

'Despite this antiquity among us, despite the fact that parliaments have been meeting here for the better part of a century, today is the first time in our history that, as we open the Parliament of the nation, that we are officially welcomed to country by the first Australians of this nation,' he said.

Rudd, who was elected in a Labor landslide in November that ended 11 years of conservative government under John Howard, recalled that when the first Parliament House in Canberra opened in 1927, the indigenous people went unrepresented save for gatecrasher Jimmy Clements, barefoot and in a ragged suit.

A local newspaper referred to him dismissively as 'a lone representative of a fast-vanishing race.' Australia's Aborigines now number 500,000 - back up to the estimated population when white colonization began in 1788 with the arrival of the First Fleet.

'Today we begin with one small step to set right the wrongs of the past, and in this ceremonial way it's a significant and symbolic step,' Rudd said.

Opposition Liberal Party leader Brendan Nelson committed the alternative government to continuing the practice of having a welcome-to-country ceremony at the start of a new parliamentary term.

'Whatever happens in future parliaments, so long as I've anything to do with it, we'll have a welcome from the Ngunnawal and their descendants,' Nelson said.



COMMENT

blog comments powered by Disqus

Latest Headlines in Asia-Pacific

Older Talkback

Follow Us

Follow M&C on Pinterest

Search

Custom Search

Also Check Out

Peter Andre ready to move on

Peter Andre ready to move on
Peter Andre is finally ready to move on from ex-wife Katie Price and wonders if he has already met the person he is 'supposed' to marry. ... more

Prince William's tribute to role model Queen

Prince Williams tribute to role model Queen
Britain's Prince William has paid tribute to his grandmother Queen Elizabeth for being an 'incredible role model'. ... more

Mariah Carey's sister wants reconciliation

Mariah Careys sister wants reconciliation
Mariah Carey's estranged sister Alison is desperate to mend her rift with the singer and meet the star's twins Moroccan and Monroe for the first time. ... more

Robin Gibb had kidney failure

Robin Gibb had kidney failure
Robin Gibb's son RJ says the Bee Gees singer's death was caused by kidney and liver failure, ... more

Matthew Morrison's sexy meals

Matthew Morrisons sexy meals
Matthew Morrison thinks cooking is 'sexy' and loves sharing candlelit dinners with his girlfriend Renee Puente. ... more

Apl.de.Ap praises 'beautiful' Cheryl

Apl.de.Ap praises beautiful Cheryl
Black Eyed Peas star Apl.de.Ap thinks Cheryl Cole is a 'beautiful' woman. ... more

Queen Elizabeth loves to laugh with her grandkids

Queen Elizabeth loves to laugh with her grandkids
Britain's Queen Elizabeth loves to share a laugh with her grandchildren and find out about their lives outside of their royal duties. ... more

David Hasselhoff to buy bar for Hayley

David Hasselhoff to buy bar for Hayley
David Hasselhoff wants to buy his Welsh girlfriend Hayley Roberts a bar which he will call the Hoff & Hounds. ... more

Gavin Rossdale refuses to speak to ex after DNA test

Gavin Rossdale refuses to speak to ex after DNA test
Gavin Rossdale has refused to speak to Pearl Lowe since she allowed their daughter Daisy to take a DNA test which revealed he is her father. ... more

Gary Barlow's odd queen meetings

Gary Barlows odd queen meetings
Gary Barlow does find meeting Britain's Queen Elizabeth is 'really odd' because it can be 'relaxing'. ... more