By Lidia Thorpe
For First Nations people across this
country, January is a hard month. The colonial flag-waving, the heightened
racism, the collective amnesia, and the celebration of violent occupation.
After more than 200 years of colonisation, too many Australians still think
January 26 is a day of celebration.
Since James Cook first set foot at
Kamay (Botany Bay), there have been at least 270 massacres of First Nations peoples
in this country. We will never know the true number of casualties - only that
many thousands of First Nations people across this nation were massacred in
numerous frontier wars, over many decades, often in cold blood. Today, black
deaths in custody only serve to remind us that this period of violence and
injustice has not yet finished.
That’s why, for Aboriginal people across this country, January 26 marks a day of mourning…..
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