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Suppression and Indigenous Responses

Sociology
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Suppression and Indigenous Responses

Sociology
01 May 2026

Historical Suppression of Australian Indigenous Cultures

From colonisation in 1788 onwards, successive colonial and federal governments enacted policies explicitly designed to destroy, assimilate, or suppress Australian Indigenous cultures. These policies constitute one of the most sustained and systematic programmes of cultural destruction in modern history.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Government suppression of Indigenous cultures was not accidental or incidental to colonisation — it was deliberate policy. Understanding these policies is essential to understanding contemporary Indigenous disadvantage.

Key Government Policies of Suppression

1. Dispossession and the Reserve System

  • From the 1860s, colonial governments established reserves where Aboriginal people were forcibly relocated
  • Reserves controlled movement, employment, marriage, and cultural practice
  • Reserve managers (often missionaries) prohibited Indigenous languages, ceremonies, and kinship practices
  • Board for the Protection of Aborigines (Vic, 1869) and equivalent bodies in other colonies had sweeping powers over Aboriginal people’s lives

2. Assimilation Policies

  • From the late 19th century through the 1960s, assimilation was the dominant government policy
  • Aim: to absorb Aboriginal people into mainstream (European) Australian society by erasing cultural difference
  • A. O. Neville (Chief Protector of Aborigines, WA, 1915–1940) explicitly stated the goal was to “breed out” Aboriginal identity within three generations

3. The Stolen Generations (approximately 1910–1970)

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children were forcibly removed from their families under state and territory legislation
  • Children were placed in institutions or with white families, forbidden from speaking their languages or maintaining cultural connections
  • The Bringing Them Home report (1997) estimated that between 1 in 3 and 1 in 10 Aboriginal children were removed during this period
  • Long-term effects: intergenerational trauma, loss of language and culture, family fragmentation

4. Language Prohibition

  • On missions and reserves, speaking Indigenous languages was often banned and punished
  • Teachers were instructed to use English only; children were beaten for speaking their mother tongue
  • This directly suppressed the transmission of non-material culture across generations

5. Restriction on Ceremonies

  • Many sacred ceremonies were prohibited by managers and missionaries
  • Photography, recording, and performance of ceremonial material was restricted or appropriated without consent

EXAM TIP: The VCAA expects you to know at least one specific policy in detail. The Stolen Generations is the most commonly examined. Know: the mechanism (removal), the legal authority, the stated justification, and the cultural consequences.

Indigenous Responses to Suppression

Indigenous Australians were not passive victims — they actively resisted, adapted, and maintained culture despite suppression.

Response Type Examples
Active resistance Pemulwuy’s resistance in early colonial Sydney; Jandamarra’s resistance in the Kimberley (1890s)
Legal/political resistance William Cooper’s 1938 Day of Mourning; formation of the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI, 1958)
Cultural maintenance Secretly continuing ceremonies; passing on oral histories; maintaining kinship systems covertly
Community organisation Aboriginal Tent Embassy established 1972; Aboriginal Legal Services established 1970s
Land rights campaigns 1963 Yirrkala Church Panels (first formal petition to Australian Parliament); 1966 Wave Hill Walk-Off (Gurindji people, led by Vincent Lingiari)
Policy change advocacy 1967 Referendum — 90.77% voted to include Aboriginal people in the census and allow the federal government to make laws for them

REMEMBER: The 1967 referendum did NOT give Aboriginal people the right to vote (that came in 1962). It removed two discriminatory clauses from the Constitution: one that excluded Aboriginal people from the census, and one that prevented the federal government from making laws for them.

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