Sol Bellear
We passed a milestone on the long path of black and white Australia this week, though it wasn’t the one everyone thought — the 25th anniversary of Paul Keating’s Redfern speech — but something else.
On Friday, there was a state funeral in Sydney for Sol Bellear, and, on the weekend, a quieter ceremony in Canberra for the passing of Denis Walker — two Black Power Aboriginal leaders whose names once struck fear into the hearts of tabloid newspaper readers in the 1970s, as visions of a black uprising were conjured up in double-page spreads.
For the most part, the Australian Black Power movement was about building black community, autonomy and resistance; but naive, and willing, reporters could always be gulled into believing that the revolution was just ’round the corner. Bellear and Walker were two mainstays of a movement that, as such movements do, produced many people, radicalised and risen up by the demands politics makes. Bellear got a state funeral; Walker some brief notices. It is worth remembering, through what follows, that some will get nothing at all.
Black Power emerged as a distinct movement in the late 1960s, and largely in the cities, as Aboriginal people — who before the mid-1960s could not travel out of their “district” without official permission — came to Sydney and Brisbane, especially. Much campaigning at the time was reformist and petitioning, as expressed in the name of the main body, the Aborigines Advancement League. Black Power as a self-conscious movement came out of a series of increasingly tense struggles with a violent police force in Redfern, and the virtual police state of Joh Bjelke-Petersen’s Queensland. From the start, it saw itself as part of a global movement, not denying the special condition of Aboriginal Australia, but keen to connect to the idea that blackness was a global historical condition, covering many ethnicities.
Thus in Sydney, Bellear, originally from northern New South Wales, and others, focused on establishing Aboriginal health and medical services — as well as citizen patrols to keep an eye on racist cops. In Brisbane, Denis Walker and others were essentially living in a war zone, and established the Black Panther Party of Australia.
In 1970, Bellear, Gary Foley, the playwright Jack Davis and others attended a major Black Power conference in Atlanta. “Sol was a big man, and he came back from that with the biggest afro I have ever seen,” Foley observed. “But what was important was he had the best understanding of all of us of the black power movement, and the politics of what we were doing, and he imparted that.”
Bellear’s brother Bob became the first Aboriginal judge; Sol turned out for South Sydney Rabbitohs and was dropped by them for giving a Black Power salute. The newspaper reports were as one in noting that, years later, he became a member of the Rabbitohs board. It was Bellear who, in 1992, would bring Keating on stage to deliver the Redfern speech.
Yes and it’s the usual thing, all good stories in the obits — but all directed to the idea that “it all turned out alright in the end, didn’t it?”. But what oppression and pain that covers over — a potential sports career gone for one gesture, as one small example — and what the oppressed always face: that there is no path to life but through political struggle, that life itself is the luxury. The different fates and different memorials of Bellear and Walker are instructive here: Walker did his fair share of direct community-building too. But he retreated from public life in recent decades due to damage of various types acquired in prison. The desire to join the Black Power era to the present was palpable in all reports.
But it can’t be, straightforwardly. “We achieved more in the Black Power era than before or since,” Foley noted, “and it was done through independent action.” The lives and passing of Bellear and Walker, on the Redfern speech anniversary, foreground a question that can’t be ducked anymore: has the era in which “native title”, “nations” and the like have become the main organising principle, served the cause as well as a movement that emphasised the unity of the oppressed?
Black power, here and elsewhere, took an imposed category and made it one, subjective and owned by those it sought to limit and enclose. I am just about the whitest person around to ask this, but in such a week it can’t really be avoided: is it better to take power and gain recognition from your enemy for that act, than to seek recognition from the enemy in the hope that with it, power will also be granted?
As has oft been noted, this country has a Black history.
Thanks for this timely reminder Guy.
That last par is spot on.
I know a doctor who treated a victim of Denis Walker – the man was bashed to an inch of his life and on life-support for quite a while, for slightly Walker over a woman. The doctor, who spent many years in remote communities and still works with predominantly Aboriginal men, remembers Walker as a violent thug. Numerous court cases Walker was involved with attest to the same. This lionising of Aboriginal thugs does nothing to address the high rates of lateral violence in Indigenous communities, nor go anywhere positive in addressing Aboriginal violence against women – where Indigenous women are 32 times more likely to be hospitalised from DV than their non-Indigenous sisters. With so many non-violent Aboriginal people to fete, why stick a thug on a pedestal? Would you laud a violent non-Indigenous person the same?
Rebecca, Marlene Cummins had a go at articulating the terrible dilemma – in a political solidarity sense – your post raises, a few years ago.
https://www.google.com.au/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2015/oct/29/black-panther-marlene-cummins-im-over-women-who-speak-on-behalf-of-us
I suppose I am like many white, middle class Australians of good faith: helplessly clueless, when it comes to understanding what Indigenous Australians want, and need, and how best to get there. I think the poster on another thread who suggested that Non-Indigenous Australia should seek to assimilate/reconcile better with Indigenous Australia, rather than the other way around, is onto something though.
How/where can I find more about this idea? As a n0n-Indigenous Australian it would be so amazing to be able to work towards better reconciliation.
Ann McGrath
Ann, as I said, I am probably a typically useless, albeit well-meaning, average Australian as far as concrete ideas go. But I was referring to the poster ‘John Newton’ over on GR’s Pearson thread.
https://uat.crikey.com.au/2017/12/06/rundle-reflecting-on-noel-pearsons-betrayal-essay-and-his-dual-failure/#comment-371563
Dunno how you would go about getting in touch but judging from his contributions to that thread I think he’d have a much better answer than most.
Hi, Ann. Professor Foley’s online resource is a great place to start understanding Black Power in Australia. http://www.kooriweb.org/
As Guy notes in the article, the idea of “blackness” as a broad category, rather than a specific cultural or ethnic identity, was so important to this era of activism. You can hear the echoes of this in the Black Lives Matter movement (very easy to search) and get a great account of the Black Panther Party easily. I think there is even a pretty good Netflix doco on them.
The film Australia Daze is an entertaining introduction to some of these ideas. (Search for it on YouTube.) I would also say that the idea of “reconciliation” is not one that Black Power particularly likes. For good reason, in my view. This is, as Guy says, a matter not of working within a system, but opposing it. It’s not friendly “let’s forget past grievances!” but a radical and informed attempt to rebuild a system that continues to reproduce racism. So what you get are some really interesting things, like the Aboriginal Legal Service, that take a new approach to law.
Here is a very recent talk between Jack Latimore (top bloke and occasional Crikey contributor) and members of Black Lives Matter, recently in Australia to accept the Sydney Peace Prize.
https://www.wheelercentre.com/events/black-lives-matter-in-conversation
Wheeler Centre usually posts the audio or vision of talks within a month of them occurring.
I hope that Professor Foley will publish his account of the movement in coming years. You can access his doctoral work, though, at the University of Melbourne.
I would also recommend the reporting work of Amy McQuire, over at Buzzfeed. Like many young black intellectuals and reporters, she is aware of the Black Power movement and sees that “reform” (AKA reconciliation) has its limits.
(I should own up to the fact that I was bang into reconciliation in the ’90s.)
Happy reading. This stuff is amazing. It shows us not only the way out of our racist history, but a way that politics can be DIY for us all.