Indigenous dancers perform during the Welcome to Country before a Melbourne Storm-Cronulla Sharks match.Credit:Getty Images
This kind of response is a perfect demonstration of what saddens me so much about our current condition – that,at least in the public arena,many people have lost the ability to think and speak rationally about these issues.
The loudest voices seem totally incapable of nuance:if you are not willing to wholeheartedly implement a Welcome to Country at every occasion,not willing to move heaven and earth to make sure Indigenous culture is front and centre of your events,you are on the side of the oppressor. You hate Indigenous Australians – you’re a racist.
It’s infantile and a nation cannot function properly or hope to be strong with that as its foundational rhetoric.
One of the markers of maturity as we transition from adolescence to adulthood is our ability to recognise areas of grey – to appreciate that a problem or solution may not be black and white.
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When it comes to Welcomes to,and Acknowledgments of,Country,I wonder if the answer is not black and white. Perhaps these ceremonies are not to be done away with altogether,nor are they to be performed in every setting. Perhaps the grey teaches us that their legitimacy and significance are most clearly borne out when we limit their proliferation.
And perhaps the substance of these ceremonies is another element that requires a mature conversation. If you want the Australian public to grasp the reality of these ceremonies,if their sacred and genuine nature is to be preserved,my advice:cease with the activism. Because while the historical form of these ceremonies may be up for debate,I am quite sure that the most accurate versions are not those that include a lecture in colonial guilt. Have the ceremony,but lose the extremism. It only discredits the person performing it and risks alienating the broader community.