'Blackbirding' shame yet to be acknowledged in Australia
Emelda
Davis. Photo: Supplied
As a second generation descendant of South Sea Islanders (kanaks) who were
ruthlessly recruited (blackbirded) to serve in the most appalling conditions as
plantation workers in the sugar industry of Australia, I am part of a
family of activists who have sought to attain recognition and social justice
for my people.
More than
55,000 people, mostly men, were brought from Vanuatu, the Solomons and eighty
surrounding islands under what Australia called the indentured labour trade,
which was akin to slavery. They were first brought to NSW in
1847 with an influx to Queensland between 1863 and 1904.
My
grandfather was taken off the island of Tana in what is now the Tafea Province
of Vanuatu in the late 1800s. He was one of the many children whose birth right
of freedom was stripped from him at the age of 12 when he was taken to work in
the sugar cane fields. He never returned home. The experience and belief of our
South Sea Islander communities, passed down through oral histories, is that our
forefathers were enslaved regardless of the pretence of contracts. Most
definitely this was a legal framework for what was in fact criminal activity,
which saw the early deaths of 30 per cent of these "labour recruits",
buried in unmarked graves across north-eastern Australia.
It was
illegal to bring children under the age of 16 unless accompanied by an adult.
However, there are many community stories - including my grandfather's - which
contradict those regulations.
In the 1995
documentary Sugar Slaves, my grandfather's story is told by his eldest
surviving daughter, Phyllis Corowa. She describes how he escaped deportation
from Australia by the 1901 Pacific Island Labourers Act, which inhumanely
deported 7000 people en masse, tearing established families and loved ones
apart after 40 years living in Australia.
University
of Queensland professor Clive Moore has recently written of this; the wages of
15,000 deceased Islanders were used for this deportation and the low and
hard-earned wages of the Islanders were used to pay part of their fare to
return to the islands that in some cases had seen their entire male population
kidnapped.
This was a
cruel, heartless process and one of shame to all Australians.
It gives me
great pleasure, however, to know that the efforts of my grandfather and our
kanaka men and women contributed significantly to building the strong
foundations of the sugar, pastoral and maritime industries in Australia and
that we are now the third largest sugar provider in the world as well as being
one of the wealthiest countries.
And what I
find uncanny - and what seems to me like a strange quirk of fate - I
discovered several years ago. From where I have worked in my home for the
past 19 years at Pyrmont, in inner Sydney, I overlook Pirrama Park, which was
once called the "Sugar Wharf" managed by CSR, and, yes, sugar
ships docked there with the brown sugar from the cane farms in Queensland to be
refined nearby.
These ships
were managed by Burns, Philp & Co - the same company that operated over
labour recruiting and trading ships throughout the Pacific. CSR and
Burns Philp were companies built on the backs of kidnapped Islander
labourers. Notorious blackbirders Robert Towns and John Mackay both have cities
- Townsville and Mackay - dedicated in their names. Benjamin Boyd was
another in this history who has been commemorated, with the naming of Ben Boyd
Road on Sydney's north.
Our lobbying
has been arduous and has fallen on deaf ears with trinkets of acknowledgement
and funding. Our community is 40,000 strong, with 60 per cent Torres Strait
Islanders of South Sea Islander descent due to the "labour trade" and
the "Coming of the Light" (Christianity) via missionaries, and also
east coast Aboriginal Australians, since 40 per cent of whom are married into
or have Islander heritage.
Faith
Bandler and our patron, the Honourable Bonita Mabo, are amongst the most
distinguished of our elders and activists.
Part of our
work is to establish a forum to assist Islander communities in the Pacific to
gain access to meaningful work opportunities in Australia and to reconnect with
our disposed families.
We have a
long way to go for the successful establishment of the Islander people within
that of the great nation of Australia.
It is
journey to empowerment that I am proud to be part of.
Emelda Davis is the president of the Australian
South Sea Islanders (Port Jackson).
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