Call it what it is: Invasion Day

January 16, 2024
Issue 
Survival Day in Gadi/Sydney in 2023. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

In a World War II call to arms in 1942, Labor Prime Minister John Curtin (whose government unashamedly promoted a White Australia)聽said: 鈥淔rom the day that Captain Arthur Philip landed here until this hour, this land has been governed by men and women of our race. We do not intend that that tradition shall be destroyed merely because an aggressor marches against us 鈥 Australians you are the sons and daughters of Britishers.鈥

Another Labor leader, Billy Hughes, was even聽聽about the brutal colonisation. In a 1913 speech on the foundation of Canberra as the country鈥檚 capital, he bluntly said:聽鈥淲e were destined to have our own way from the beginning 鈥 [and] killed everybody else to get it.鈥

He added: 鈥淭he first historic event in the history of the Commonwealth we are engaged in today [is] without the slightest trace of that race we have banished from the face of the earth.鈥

Invasion, colonisation and genocide cannot be air-brushed out of the official celebrations of so-called 鈥淎ustralia Day鈥 on January 26.

We must call it what it is 鈥 Invasion Day 鈥 and join thousands of First Nations people and supporters who take to the streets.

The numbers joining these annual marches have grown over the past few years, morally eclipsing and shaming the official celebrations.

Just as thousands of people 鈥斅爄ncluding First Nations activists 鈥斅爃ave joined the weekly protests since October to denounce the Israeli state鈥檚 brutal genocide in Gaza, we need to come out 鈥渋n our thousands and [one day] in our millions鈥 on Invasion Day.

The sustained protests for Gaza have set a new political record, at least in the colonial settler state called Australia.

The shocking brutality of Israel鈥檚 carpet bombing and indiscriminate slaughter of thousands of civilians, many of whom were children, and the urgent focus on the global call for an immediate ceasefire, has driven this unprecedented response.

Israel now stands exposed as the racist colonial state it is.

However, the racist and genocidal character of the Australian colonial-settler state is still shrouded by official lies and excuse-making.

A deceitful historical narrative, at best, dismisses the systematic dispossession and genocide of First Nations peoples as being in the distant past.

But this is belied by the still-mounting numbers of First Nations deaths in custody and record numbers of children being removed from First Nations families.

Compared to the rest of the population, the average life expectancy of First Nations people is nine years less for males and eight years less for females. Unemployment is more than twice as high and average First Nations household incomes are more than 20% lower.

This year鈥檚 Invasion Day is also charged by the failed Voice referendum on October 14.聽

Anthony Albanese put forward聽a weak proposal for token federal constitutional recognition and an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander advisory body that could be ignored.

Nevertheless, the Coalition launched a racist and hysterical campaign, and the referendum was defeated.

Former Liberal PM John Howard weighed in, as the聽New York Times telling The Australian: 鈥淚 do hold the view that the luckiest thing that happened to this country was being colonized by the British.

鈥淣ot that they were perfect by any means, but they were infinitely more successful and beneficent colonizers than other European countries,鈥 Howard said.

While Howard was overt in his support for European colonisation, Labor in government shows that it too supports the club of rich white nation states continuing their imperial domination of the world.

Labor supports the global mining companies that continue to destroy precious First Nations heritage sites and are imperilling the liveability of the planet by exporting fossil fuels.

Labor champions the Coalition鈥檚 AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines deal, the expansion of United States military bases.

And it supports Israel鈥檚 genocidal attack on Gaza.

Many militant First Nations activists argued for a progressive 鈥淣o鈥 vote in the Voice referendum, saying what is needed instead is a truth telling campaign for sovereignty, treaties and rights-based measures to close the gap.

One strong voice was Gunnai Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung woman Independent Senator Lidia Thorpe.

After the Voice referendum defeat, her聽call聽bears repeating:

鈥淭o all the grassroots mob, activists, and allies who have built up networks, Yes or No, in the name of advancing the rights of First Peoples: We must look beyond the division that the referendum has caused and come together to demand the justice necessary to rebuild, and nurture the strength and power of our communities.

鈥淒o not let this be the last time you engage with our struggle. Pour your time, energy and passion into understanding our history and Lore, amplifying our voices and standing with our grassroots communities.

鈥淲e must continue to pressure the federal government to begin Treaty-making, implement the [United Nations] Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous people and implement in full the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody and the Bringing Them Home report that have been ignored for decades.鈥

[Peter Boyle is a member of the national executive. Find your local Invasion Day rally here.]

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