Page Eight Reforms sic By IAN McCAUSLAND part of a conglomerate ministry Associated Press Writer involving the arts, tourism and SYDNEY, Australia - After the environment. 200 years of white domination, Bryant has set about overturn- Australia's indigenous blacks - ing and reshaping policies to as- are starting to get a better deal. sist the ahorigines. They are native to this island "It is a huge task," said Bry- continent claimed for Britain by ant, 58. "Aborigines have do- Capt. John Cook in 1770 and velpe.'an friieschaed settled 88 years later as a Bri- veloped an iferiority complex tishpena colny. . .They are ashamed of their tish penal colony, ancestry. BUT THE aborigines had been "THEY ARE NOT good at re- here for centuries, roaming over sisting and prefer to step aside the land as hunters and food if trouble or a problem arises." gatherers and devising a culture Trouble and problems show up that exists today. Anthropologists in statistics on aborigines: classifieds them as Australoids, -Aboriginal babies make up 1 hut they are more commonly per cent of the infant popula- known as aborigines - the orig- tion but account for 10 per cent mat npeople. of all infant deaths in the first Tsey now comprise 1411,10o(f year and 28 per cent of second Australia's 13 million pseople. year deaths. Tennis star Evonne Goolagong - is part aborigine. IN 1971, the infant mortality rate among aborigines in central LIONEL ROSE was the first Australia was 296 deaths per aborigine to win a world sports 1,000 births. The over-all rate for crown when he took the world whites and blacks in Australia is bantamweight boxing champion 17 deaths per 1,000 births. ship i5 1966. Aborigines feature highly in But it is only recently that the prison populations. In country aborigines have managed to towns, they are often the only break through racial barriers. regular inmates in local jails. 'he Labor party government Here in Australia's biggest of Prime Minister Gough Whit- city, the 9,000 aboriginal resi- lam, elected last December, has dents are a third of 1 per cent begun to accelerate the move- of the 2.7 million population, but ment to give black Australians make up 10 per cent of the jail a better life in their own home- population. Most offenses com- land. Soon after taking office mitted by the aborigines involve Whitlam described the aboriginal assault, petty theft, drunkenness, situation as a national shame. A and disorderly conduct. social service report said the aborigines "are trapped in a cul- THERE ARE many indepen- ture of poverty." dently confirmed cases of police harassment and victimization of WHITLAM appointed Gordon aborigines, accompanied by Bryant as his minister for abor- claims that aborigines make iginal affairs. It was the first easy targets for police trying to time that this post had not been maintain arrest and conviction THE SUMMER DAILY )w for Thursday, July 19, 1973 records. -Discriminatory legislation still exists, in particular in the state of Queensland, often re- ferred to as Australia's "Deep North." Aborigines living on aboriginal settlements or reserves in Queensland can be jailed at will by the settlement manager - usually a white - expelled, or prevented from living in the set- tlement. IN SOME settlements, the manager controls the finances of the individual families. The thinking behind this is that paternalism is necessary to save aborigines from them- selves: drunkenness has become a major disease in many aborigi- nal communities. Bryant visited the Palm Is- land, Queensland, aboriginal set- tlement recently. - "THE C O N D I T I 0 NS were shocking, depressing and beyond belief in this country in this day and age," he said. "The 1,200 aborigines there were broken in spirit. A feeling of helplessness w a s every- where." There is occasional racism, too. Four of nine white girls scheduled to "come out" at a debutante-style ball at Nanago, Queensland, in June, were with- drawn by their parents. The girls would have had to curtsv to Sen. Neville Bonner, the guest of honor and only aborigine in Aus- tralia's 185-member Parliament. DESPITE THE discrimina- tory laws, aborigines have scored major successes in sports, and have achieved some fame in the arts. Miss Goolagong, 21, is the best known. Ranking among the top four best women tennis play- ers in the world, she won the women's singles at Wimbledon in 1971. Miss Goolagong says she is proud of being part aboriginal but is rarely aware of it. "I don't think of myself as being colored but of being Aus- tralian," she says. Though she makes guest appearances at aboriginal functions, she polite- ly avoids involvement with ac- tivist black groups. "I'm a tennis player," she says. "I have to keep my mind on one thing only -tennis," TOUGH SPORTS such as box- ing and rugby have more than a sprinkling of aboriginal stars. In 1966 there was bantam- weight Lionel Rose. Now Tony t t I r t s v t S C U f c C ti s ti aborignes uTrisine, current ktler of the There have been more strident Bitish middleweight boxing ,objections to other government title, is a strong contender for moves, particularly to the halt- the world crown. ing of mining exploration licenses Even Pastor Sir Doug Nicholls, on aboriginal reserves. 56, recently knighted by Queen Elizabeth It for his aboriginal THE HALT was ordered pend- advancement work, hit the head- ing the granting of aboriginal lines first as a professional run- land rights, presently being in- ner and athlete. estigated by a one man commis- sion. ROSLYN W A T S O N, 19, The situation not only involves >ecame the first aboriginal grad- handing over ownership of re- tate of the Australian ballet serves currently held by the gov- school this year. ment, but the probing of abor- Bryant is pressing for a bill iginal claims to other tribal land shich would outlaw discrimina- or ground they consider sacred. :ion throughout the country. The Aboriginals, especially the S0,- state of South Australia has such 000 full bloods, have deep cui- egislation already and has su- tural connections with land. :essfully prosecuted offenders, The complaints have come usually bar owners who have re- from mining companies which used to serve aborigines. have spent millions of dollars Moves are under way for the proving up mineral deposits in :entral government to take over some of these areas. :ontrol of aboriginal affairs from he governments of the five THE MOST notable is the Na- tates with aboriginal popula- barlek uranium discovery in the ions. Northern Territory worth $170 million. TILE IFEDERAL takeoNer was Bryant is emphatic that where land is handed over to aborigin- Sls, it is they who will decide whether mining goes ahead and iunder what conditions. "The land will be theirs and so will the decision, " he said. 'THE LAND rights issue is a mt or victory for the few abor- iginal activists around and their numerically stronger white sym- pathizers. But they are still un- happy that the land rights com- missioner is a white judge, de- spite his chattmpiining of aborig- sinal causes before being ap- pointed to the bench. Aboriginal law student Paul Coe said: "Once again, a white man has become so powerful in aboriginal affairs that his recom- mendations could decide the lifestyle of aborigines for dec- vonne Goolagong: One of the ales." ew aborigines to have success- Bryant has taken steps to ov- ully overcome the severe racial ercome this through the forma- arriers Australian society pre- tion of the National Aboriginals ents. Like in this country, the Consultative Committee. This ports world has provided some group of 70 drawn from aborigi- f the first opportunities for the nal organizations and tribes is ountry's blacks, the firerunner of a consultative nvisaged in a countrvwide fer- council. rendum in 1967 which over- helmingly supported such ac- tIlE COUNCIl would be elect- ,7. ed, and some aborigines see it as With the exception Of Queens- blossoming into a black parlia- nd, the states have indicated ment, not only advising the mm- o objections. 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