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Tuesday, 19 December 2017

Cook's Tour: Salisbury Review, Winter 2017

Captain James Cook
Here is my latest "Letter from Australia" column for the British magazine Salisbury Review:


The son of a coal bargee from Scarborough, Captain James Cook taught himself navigation, never flogged his men, was never more than five nautical miles out in his reckoning at sea, and observed the transit of Venus, a discovery that foreshadowed quantum mechanics – the means by which space ships will one day explore the universe. He was also the first man to map the eastern coast of Australia. A statue of Cook, in the midst of Sydney’s Hyde Square, always seemed like a reasonable enough memorial to one of the most accomplished seafarers to ever live. Not so, in the opinion of identity militants, who defaced the memorial in August 2017 with the slogan “no pride in genocide”.                     

The refrain “no pride in genocide” has become the catchcry of radicalised Indigenous Australians and their left-wing (mostly middle-class) apologists. It is a smear increasingly ascribed to almost everything that has transpired in Australia since the arrival of the First Fleet on January 26, 1788. Australia Day, which commemorates that very event, is now regarded as Ground Zero in the mythology of “no pride in genocide”. Our national day of celebration, in a world turned upside down, now becomes Invasion Day. It was, no doubt, only a matter of time before Captain Cook came under attack.  

The critics have found every conceivable reason to disparage the Hyde Park statue. Stan Grant, Indigenous editor for the government-funded Australian Broadcasting Corporation, has spoken of the “silence” about the Aboriginal perspective in contrast to the commemoration of heroic British figures. This might have been true once, perhaps fifty or sixty years ago, but today in Australia the Aboriginal viewpoint is promoted in a myriad of ways. There are Indigenous advisory boards to governments and local councils around Australia, a state-sponsored Indigenous television network, festivals celebrating Indigenous art and music and the Welcome to Country and Acknowledgment of Country ceremonies, which explicitly identity Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders as the traditional custodians of the land. Moreover, the role of Aboriginals before, during and after the advent of European settlement happens to be a key theme of the national History curriculum. “Reconciliation”, as the policy is known, involves everything from theme-based sporting fixtures to the provision of academic scholarships for young Aboriginals. To assert there is “silence” on the subject of Indigenous Australians seems almost perverse.

Grant even bemoans the inscription attached to Cook’s Hyde Park statue, which reads: “Discovered this territory 1770”. He claims the caption should be discounted as “fiction” given that Australian Aboriginals inhabited the Great Southern Land for some 40,000 to 60,000 years before the British navy’s research vessel, HMS Endeavour, arrived on the scene.

Nevertheless, Keith Windschuttle, historian and editor of the conservative Quadrant magazine, has pointed out that by being the first to navigate and chart the entirety of Australia’s eastern coast, James Cook had, conceptually speaking, discovered “this territory”. Without for a moment questioning the pre-existence and superior knowledge of their respective tribal lands, Windschuttle makes the sound observation that Indigenous Australians did not identify the eastern seaboard as a cartographical unit: “None of them gained the view of it that Cook had in his four-month journey from Port Hicks to Cape York in 1770. He was the genuine discoverer of the whole entity”.                      

For the naysayers, though, this is mostly beside the point as James Cook allegedly committed a racist crime when he came ashore on Possession Island, August 22, 1770, and claimed the entire eastern coastline for the British Empire. Cook’s offence, and the offence of the British colonial project that later ensued, was to treat the continent of Australia as terra nullius, a term interpreted by activists and educators alike to mean “unoccupied” or “land belonging to no one”. The charge, to put it bluntly, is that the British Empire annexed this new Pacific territory on the basis of a racist lie.

The problem with this argument, as Michael Connor outlined in his 2005 book The Invention of Terra Nullius, is that it’s erroneous: “The phrase was unknown to eighteenth and nineteenth-century Australian colonists: it was not referred to in colonial courts or the Privy Council; it was never used by the British government to explain their appropriation of New Holland.” Legal academics and historians concerned with race relations were shocked to discover, as Connor explained to Windschuttle, that the sense in which they employed the expression had only been in use since 1981 and “that they had all been simply recycling one another’s footnotes without bothering to look up the original source”. Not that this stopped them – or Aboriginal activists and the publishers of modern-day school textbooks – carrying on as if it were true. Today, as a consequence, young Australians are uncritically taught that terra nullius constitutes the original sin of British settlement.

This is significant because modern-day Aboriginal activists and most academics, argues Keith Windschuttle in The Break-Up of Australia, have wildly exaggerated the violence between the original British colonialists and the Indigenous population. The extent of Aboriginal acquiescence to Western civilisation is entirely omitted from the radical narrative in order to accentuate active resistance. Left-wing historians, such as Henry Reynolds, did this in order to assert that Australia was not “settled” but “invaded” by the British. One of the political consequences is the promotion of “Aboriginal sovereignty” at the expense of the Australia’s national sovereignty. Windschuttle’s The Break-up of Australia makes the case that militants of every hue foresee a parallel Indigenous state that will challenge the legitimacy of a popularly elected parliament to rule for all Australians, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike. Thus, in the name of so-called reconciliation between Australia’s “First Peoples” and everybody else, we might actually be in a downward spiral to a new form of sectarianism.                                          

The situation might not be so dire if the chattering classes throughout the West, not excluding Australia, had not fallen in love with a nihilistic fantasy. Roger Sandall’s seminal The Culture Cult perceptively argues that the “heavily didactic semifiction” of Ruth Benedict’s and Margaret Mead’s anthropology has shaped contemporary Western middle-class sensibilities in ways that are deeply detrimental for all concerned. Now, in the soft totalitarianism of PC rectitude, the inequities of Western civilisation are unfavourably contrasted with a sanitised version of pre-Colombian or pre-European tribal societies. Sandall cited Walt Disney’s Pocahontas as the apotheosis of the “Noble Savage” caricature: Immaculate Powhatan Native Americans exist in a state of harmony until Westerners – “uncivilised” and “ignorant heathens” who are “beasts” and “filthy savages” – descend on paradise like “ravenous wolves” and “devour everything in their path”.

It is the same story in Australia. Where once people of all political persuasions spoke about the “common good”, and how Indigenous Australians could best benefit from being an integral part of a democratic and wealthy country, the 1972-75 Whitlam government came up with the idea of Aboriginal self-determination and the establishment of land rights in isolated (and mostly northern) parts of the country. Many Indigenous Australians, on account of this policy, endure an almost Third World standard of living. Although the Northern Territory government, in 2007, released the Little Children are Sacred Report, detailing substance abuse, domestic violence and suicide, the legacy of the Whitlam remains firmly in place. These days, anybody who suggests that self-determination has been a policy failure runs the risk of being called a racist.

The irony is that Indigenous Australians who inhabit the suburbs of the (mostly southern) towns and city of the continent have experienced, as even Stan Grant has acknowledged in the past, a veritable “renaissance”. Australia, then, is not a racist country but a British-style parliamentary democracy that has allowed, at least in the long haul, people the freedom to be the architects of their own destiny – something that is only possible as long as they live in relative proximity to a good education and good jobs. That is not, of course, to deny that the Aboriginal “renaissance” has been a long time coming. There have been countless tragedies and misunderstandings along the way, none of which should be ignored, and yet if “reconciliation” is to really mean anything there has to be respect on all sides: the astonishing feats of Captain James Cook are worthy of some of that respect.

Warren Mundine, an Aboriginal leader on the more conservative side of the Indigenous movement, described the campaign to remove Cook’s statue as “nonsense”. That said, he advocated more memorials for Indigenous Australians: “In Australia, the problem is an absence of memorials, we need more about our people, our indigenous people.” Where Mundine differs from the Left – and where he reveals a concern for the common good above mindless sectarianism – is his denunciation of the “no pride in genocide” campaign as Stalinist, an attempt to rewrite the past in order to serve the political-correct fashion of today. Or, as George Orwell would put it: “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.”                                                      


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