An Indigenous home for Indigenous children
Archived
You are in an archived section of the website. This information may not be current.
This page was first created in December, 2012
An Indigenous home for
        Indigenous children 
Speech by Michael Dodson,
        Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner at the
        SNAICC National Conference, Townsville, June 1997
To all of you who
        work with and for Indigenous children and families - my deepest congratulations.
        Many of you have spent years decrying the treatment of Indigenous children.You
        have written and spoken, cajoled and attempted to convince and then lobbied
        some more - just trying to get the people of this country to open their
        eyes. Your energy has been boundless. Your patience infinite.
Now, perhaps, your
        work is beginning to bear fruit.
In the last weeks
        we have seen a most extraordinary turn of events. Day after day and now
        week after week the newspapers and airwaves have been jammed with talk
        about our families and children. Day after day the letters pages a filled
        with the reactions of ordinary Australians, horrified at the truths they
        never knew. Never before have so many Australians turned their attention
        to our families. Never before has Australia really known or cared about
        our children. 黑料情报站 taken from the arms of their mothers. Taken from
        their cultures. 
No one could say
        that the battle has been won! But we have got the nation's attention.
        And despite the efforts of some of the nations political leaders to minimise
        the atrocities - we have captured much of the nation's heart.
Last week, a father
        wrote to the Sydney Morning Herald asking where he might lay his hands
        on a copy of Bringing Them Home because his seven year old son
        keeps asking him questions he can't answer.
Questions like:
Who took the children?
        Why did they take them?
        Did they give them back?
        Why didn't the kids write to their mum and dad and tell them where they
        were?
        Were they, the kids, sad?
Our office has been
        flooded with messages from ordinary Australians - words full of grief
        and compassion and shame. 
A young woman described
        reading the report on a tram - tears pouring down her face - and turning
        to all those around her to tell them what she was learning. She said that
        when she had finished the report for the second time, she would be lending
        it to everyone she knew - and later she would keep it to give her children
        and eventually her grandchildren.
Another woman sent
        me a photo of her newborn twins, with a note on the back thanking us for
        creating a future they can look forward to.
When John Laws discussed
        the report on his show 2 weeks ago, we received 1200 phone calls asking
        for copies of the community guide.
The pain of children
        torn from their families is our daily reality. Now it has become part
        of the reality of all Australians. And that in itself is no small achievement.
        Which makes now the most important time of all. If ignorance was an excuse
        for inaction - this new found awareness must be the basis for action.
        Now is the time that we must translate good will into substantive change.
As you know, the
        National Inquiry into the Removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
        children from their families found that past policies of removal have
        had, and continue to have a horrendous impact on our families and communities.
        The report of the inquiry recounts, in graphic detail the personal agony
        of the families, of those who were themselves removed, and of their children.
        Their stories fill the seven hundred pages of this report. 
They also filled
        eighteen months of my life sitting on the inquiry. Throughout my professional
        life I have been steeped in the abuses that my people suffer. But never,
        never have I seen what I saw when witnesses to the inquiry came before
        me. never have I heard what I heard as they spoke of their lives. Nothing
        could have prepared me for the weight of suffering that so many of our
        brothers and sisters bear. If ever non-Indigenous Australians wondered
        about the basis of our grievances - they need wonder no more. Here it
        is - in this volume - for all to see.
I truly believe that
        anyone- no matter what their stand on race issues is, knows that it is
        harmful and wrong to take children from their families. Everyone understands
        that children need their mothers and fathers and aunties and uncles and
        grandmas. Everyone knows that institutions don't grow up healthy, happy
        children. With the release of this report, all Australians will know that
        these harms and these wrongs have been the systematic fate of our families.
        And all Australians can be moved to action - just as we have been.
The Human Rights
        and Equal Opportunity Commission was asked to inquire into past laws,
        polices and practices of removal. To date, media attention and public
        debate have focussed on that aspect of the report.  As I have repeatedly
        stated - it is crucial that all Australians acknowledge past injustices
        . without that we cannot even begin to contemplate reconciliation or national
        cohesion. But, the National Inquiry was also charged with looking into
        current laws, policies and practices concerning the care and placement
        of Indigenous children. In fact, we devoted much of our time, and about
        one third of the report to what is happening to our children today.
We must not let the
        contemporary dimension of the report be lost in the fiery debate over
        our findings about the past.
The fourth term of
        reference - contemporary removal is an integral part of the story the
        report has to tell. It is not simply another issue tacked onto the end
        to bring the report up to date. Contemporary removal is not conceptually
        distinct from past policies and practices. It grows out of what happened
        yesterday, and a decade ago. And throughout the last two hundred years.
        There is an unbroken line that moves through the story of removal. And
        that line is cultural destruction.
The laws, policies
        and practices of past removal were not simply unjust. They were not merely
        cruel or unethical. They were genocidal. There it is the 'g'; word - that
        word that has caused such an uproar.
We do not use the
        word genocide because it evokes more horror than any other word. We do
        not use it because it is controversial. We use it because of its precise
        meaning. Genocide is an act taken with the intent to destroy, in whole
        or in part, a racial group. The intent to destroy a people. Our people.
The explicitly racist
        and genocidal laws of the past have been wiped from the statute books.
        And the state no longer overtly sets out to destroy Indigenous peoples,
        as peoples. But neither the racism, nor the cultural destruction are things
        of the past. Our children are still systematically taken from their families
        and communities. And taken at an astronomical rate. Our children are 6
        times more likely than other children to be removed for welfare reasons
        and 21 times more likely to be removed for juvenile justice reasons. Now
        more than ever, Australians can not turn away from what is happening in
        our own country at this moment. 
Now that it is known
        what happens to children who are taken from their families this country
        cannot allow the ground to be laid for another and then another generation
        of stolen children.
Now, more than ever
        as Australia contemplates its identity - Australians must not turn away
        from the real meaning of removing Indigenous children. Taking Indigenous
        children is not just an act of violence against those children and their
        families. It is an act of cultural destruction. Our people have barely
        survived the genocidal policies of the past. We cannot afford, as peoples,
        or as a nation to allow current laws and policies to decimate Australia's
        first peoples.
Since the release
        of the report, one of things people keep asking is: "how is this
        any different from the removal of non-Indigenous kids?" they point
        out that it was common practice for children to be taken from white single
        mothers or white families who did not meet departmental standards. 
There is a simple
        answer to that question. Indigenous children and only Indigenous children
        were taken because of their race. Only Indigenous children became wards
        of the state at birth. They could legally remove an Indigenous child without
        alleging neglect or abuse. You just had to say they were Aboriginal. There
        were separate statutes specifically authorising the removal of our children
        because their Aboriginality was a "problem".
But there is a more
        complex answer - an answer about the contours of cultural difference and
        systemic racism.
Some of you may have
        heard that I spoke about this report at the Second World Congress on Family
        Law and the Rights of 黑料情报站 and Youth in San Fransisco a couple of
        weeks ago. I was asked to address the Congress on family functions and
        family forms, and in that context discussed the experiences of Indigenous
        families under the laws and policies of this country. In particular, I
        focused on the conflict between the values that underpin the state's law
        and policy and the values and cultures of Indigenous families.
The issues I raised
        were of great interest to the participants at the conference. Because
        what happened to Australia's first peoples has happened to first peoples
        in colonised countries throughout the world. The conference recognised
        that child removal has been one of the greatest crimes of colonisation.
        At the end of the conference, we passed a resolution condemning the removal
        of Indigenous as a gross violation of human rights. The convention called
        on all states who engaged in such practices to formally and unconditionally
        apologise, and to make reparations.
Australian governments
        have long taken office on "family values" platforms. They promote
        policies to strengthen and support Australian families. And we would be
        the first to stand behind that. Family is tremendously important to us.
        But if your family culture does not match the state culture, its laws
        and policies bear little resemblance to support. In our case, quite the
        opposite. They have undermined, and they continue to undermine our families.
        Colonial states embody the coloniser's culture. Their language is the
        language of the colonising culture. Their laws and systems reflect the
        values and aspirations of that culture. And they do that so invisibly
        that you'd never even see it. Unless you do not fit. When they try to
        make our families white, they destroy the source of our identity. They
        sap our strength and they threaten our survival.
Racism is not just
        about one individual discriminating against another individual. Structural
        racism is about the hierarchy of cultures. 黑料情报站 one group of people imposing
        their values on another. Racism comes in many forms. It can be well disguised,
        even dressed as "the best of intentions". Racism - in this broad
        sense - was and is the basis of the removal of our children. And that
        is why it is not the same as the removal of other children.
Some people have
        argued against our findings by saying that children were removed with
        the best intentions . Far from trying to hurt them, the argument runs,
        the intention was to save them. That may well have been what people thought
        they were doing. But, quite frankly, that is irrelevant to the finding
        of genocide - or the fact of cultural destruction. The authorities who
        took and who continue to take our children often framed their actions
        in terms of the best interests of the child. They thought - and think
        that removal was "for their own good" - to free them from our
        dysfunctional families. To protect them from our moral failings. To immunise
        them against our pathological behaviour.
They see our families
        as faulty so they have to fix them. They see our cultures as impoverished,
        so they have to enlighten them. They see our difference as inferiority,
        so they have to improve it. They judge our difference - and they try to
        take it away. But it is our difference that makes us unique - and our
        uniqueness that we want to protect. They look at the way we share responsibility
        for children with our extended kin and they see instability. They look
        at the way we allow our children autonomy and they see irresponsibility.
        They think our preference for comfort and affection over discipline is
        a mark of our moral weakness. Before their scrutinising eyes, all this
        is just evidence of the fact that we are not qualified to produce decent
        members of society.
The United Nations
        Convention on the Rights of the Child specifically states that a child
        who is Indigenous has a right to enjoy his or her own culture - in community
        with other members of the group. In case that is not clear enough - let
        me spell it out. Our children have a right to their Indigenous culture.
        It is not in the best interests of our children to take them away
        from their Indigenous culture.
But is this the principle
        that informs Australia's policies on children? I think not. They take
        our children from their own culture - and they deposit them in an alien
        culture. 
No other international
        human rights treaty has received the degree of support that has been given
        to the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Close to two hundred countries
        (there are only three member states of the United Nations that have not
        signed/ratified) across the globe - including Australia agree that a child's
        own culture is absolutely central to their well being.
But our domestic
        law and policy flies in the face of that recognition. Contemporary juvenile
        justice and welfare systems still construe Aboriginality as a problem.
        Far from respecting and protecting cultural connection, they still see
        it as a risk factor. They still see Indigenous communities and families
        as "dysfunctional" and "culturally deprived". It is
        only our children that are potentially savable. But to save them, you
        have to protect them from contamination from Indigenous environments.
        We are still somehow seen as incompetent to bring up or care for our own
        children, and make them into acceptable members of society. We are still
        seen as morally deficient and in need of guidance.
From our point of
        view, the rates of removal are a source of the greatest grief. But non-Indigenous
        society holds them up as proof of our failure. You - the people who work
        at the front line with Indigenous families would be the first to acknowledge
        that many of our children are living in troubled environments. No one
        knows better than their parents that many of our children are troubled.
        Nor does anyone have to tell our communities that many of our children
        cope with their problems by causing more trouble. 
But recognising that
        there is a problem, and blaming us for it, are two very different things.
        And they lead to two very different types of response.
Seeing us as the
        problem has led to the development of elaborate legal and bureaucratic
        systems of control. We are surrounded by police, courts, welfare officers,
        foster parents and juvenile justice centres, all of whom apparently know
        better than us, how to look after our kids. If you understand the problem,
        you may well see that taking control away from us is the very worst thing
        you can do. 
When you think an
        Indigenous child is not adequately cared for, you can remove her on the
        grounds of neglect. Or you can look at the historic and systematic homelessness,
        the unemployment, the racism, the dispossession and the poverty that characterise
        her family and community. If you do that, you might well decide that the
        best way to help her is to alleviate the disadvantage around her.
When you think that
        a child is not being properly brought up, look at who his parents are.
        Many are themselves the survivors of past removal policies. They are still
        suffering the psychological and emotional damage of those policies. Left
        alone to cope with their own losses, it is hardly surprising that they
        are unable to provide their child with a loving, strong and safe home.
If you see that,
        you may well recognise that the best way to help that child is to support
        his parents, and allow them to give him the parenting he needs. When you
        think that our children are acting out you would do well to look at their
        context and their inheritance. Time and again, we see the children of
        the stolen generation inherit their parents' unresolved feelings and express
        those feelings in the form of violence, criminality, self-abuse and substance
        abuse.
If you just take
        them away, you are doing little more than sealing the fate of another
        generation. Quite frankly - we are sick of being made the problem. We
        think it is about time to turn the tables. If there is a "mismatch"
        between the broader non-Indigenous culture and our Indigenous culture,
        then they fail to meet our standards just as much as we fail to meet theirs.
        From our point of view, when non-Indigenous society removes our children
        from their Indigenous families and communities it is not saving them.
        It is condemning them to a life which they will never fit.
We now have undeniable
        proof that putting Indigenous children in non-Indigenous families or institutions
        rarely, if ever, gives them happy and full lives. The great assimilationist
        dream of making them into another shade of white just does not work. By
        now a long succession of royal commissions, inquiries and reports have
        been highly critical of mainstream welfare and juvenile justice systems.
        Their conclusions are unanimous. These systems contravene the basic rights
        of Indigenous children and families. They fail to uphold the principle
        of self-determination. They contravene Australia's international human
        rights commitments. They don't even do what they are set up to do - protect
        children and the community.
黑料情报站 who go into
        welfare come out without a sense of self and without a sense of belonging.
        黑料情报站 who go into detention come out and reoffend. They graduate from
        the welfare system to the juvenile justice system. And from the juvenile
        justice system to the criminal justice system.
How many times will
        we have to repeat these facts? How many times are we going to read or
        write the recommendations, receive the government's endorsement and the
        listen to their commitment to implementation? We have heard it all too
        many times already. Mouthing support is but a hollow gesture if it is
        not matched by a genuine willingness to change the culture which underpins
        the removal of Indigenous children. And the fact is that the culture of
        control remains firmly in place.
For 20 years self
        determination has been the official national policy. It is also a human
        right of all peoples. But we are still the objects, not the subjects of
        family law. We are still having decisions made for us. We are still being
        told what is in our best interests.  Our key recommendation on contemporary
        removal is little different to what you, the workers in the field and
        people in the community have been saying for years. 
Self determination
        and cultural connection are the keys to the well-being of Indigenous children
        and young people.
We are calling on
        the commonwealth to work with key players, including SNAICC, to establish
        legislation to give a national framework for the principle of self-determination
        to be put into practice. This legislation would allow communities or regions
        to negotiate with the Commonwealth and the relevant State or Territory
        to establish arrangements for their own children. 
Some communities
        may want to take over all or some of the welfare, juvenile justice, care
        and protection and adoption matters currently controlled by governments.
        Others may want to share those functions. Others may want current authorities
        to continue to work with their children - but to have greater say about
        their operations.
The key is that communities
        not governments will decide how best to address welfare and juvenile
        justice issues.
The framework legislation
        would set out minimum standards to ensure that children's rights are protected,
        no matter who is in control of the laws and policies affecting Indigenous
        children. That means that communities which are not ready, or do not want
        to take over welfare and juvenile justice functions, need not feel they
        are handing their children to the lions. Certain basic principles and
        standards will be guaranteed. 
The standards we
        have outlined are derived largely from the views put to us by Indigenous
        organisations and families. They are also firmly grounded in international
        legal and human rights standards set out in the key international instruments.
        These include the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the International
        Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The key principle underpinning
        the standards is that the best interest of the child must at all times
        be paramount. And in the case of Indigenous children, the basic presumption
        must be that the best interest is to remain within his or her Indigenous
        family, community and culture. 
Any authority making
        arrangements for Indigenous children must consider the need for the child
        to maintain contact with their family and culture.  Decision makers
        must consider the significance of the child's culture and heritage for
        his or her future well-being. Every non-Indigenous decision maker must
        consult with accredited Indigenous organisations from the point of notification
        or arrest, and at each stage from then on. Token involvement or ad hoc
        consultation after decisions are made and the child is already on the
        systemic treadmill will not do.
Our recommendations
        are designed to attack the problem at its heart. For too long we have
        long suffered a system which undermines our communities. We want one which
        strengthens us. For too long we have lived under authorities ignorant
        of our values. We want to authorise those values. For too long, we have
        seen what is precious to us taken away.
When they take our
        land, they take the ground of our culture. When they take our children,
        they take the future of our culture. If they keep on taking, there will
        be nothing left. 
Ladies and gentlemen,
        we can no longer equivocate. This is not history. The children taken in
        1937 became the parents unable to teach the children of 1967. The children
        taken in 1967 became the parents unable to teach the children of 1997.
        If they take the children in 1997 - worse still if they take them in 2007
        and 2027 - there may be nothing left to teach.
We cannot allow that
        to happen. We will not allow that to happen. The taking must stop.
Thank you.
Reference notes
1. Letter
        from Michael Carey, Jakarta, Sydney Morning Herald, 13 June 1997.
        2. Article 30.
      Last
      updated 1 December 2001