The Cairns Post

Journey helps discover history

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WHEN I was asked to be the indigenous representa­tive on the Council of the Australian National Maritime Museum – whose job was to circumnavi­gate Australia with the Endeavour replica for the 250th commemorat­ion of Captain Cook – I was full of trepidatio­n, if not outright fear.

Cook is after all, the bogey man right?

That man and that ship symbolise everything that has gone wrong between indigenous and non-indigenous people.

I come from both sides of that history, and I felt compelled to immerse myself in the story to settle my own doubts.

Until now we have looked at Cook’s voyage from one aspect, but now we have a genuine chance to add the stories of our First Nations people.

I believe this circumnavi­gation is critical because it will be the first time we will come together as a nation to learn our true history, which has been largely untold.

Australia is one of the few countries that doesn’t know its history because our indigenous history has been so absent.

The commemorat­ion next year gives us a chance to address that overIt sight and find a genuine narrative balance between the ship and the shore.

There are some very important national conversati­ons going about the empowermen­t of indigenous people through constituti­onal recognitio­n and a voice to parliament.

For that to happen, the conversati­on should always start with the truth.

The truth can be painful, but I believe that Australia is well and truly ready to start, and fully engage in this important conversati­on.

Because OUR story is epic. It is a human story of courage, terrifying fear, mysticism, leadership and environmen­tal activism.

is about two completely different knowledge systems trying to communicat­e and reconcile.

There was 18 years between Cook leaving and the First Fleet arriving.

The decisions made in that time, were not by Cook, but by Joseph Banks and the Monarchy; that Australia is “no mans’ land” and would make a great offshore detention centre.

These are some of the truths that need to be revealed next year because we need to dispel the myths about Cook and understand what really went down. When Cook writes in his diary that indigenous people “are far happier than we Europeans…that the earth and sea…furnishes them with all things necessary for life”, he captures what lies at the heart of what we all have to gain from understand­ing and engaging with indigenous culture; an ancient and enduring legacy of traditiona­l ecological knowledge that truly cares for the land, the sky, the sea and our people.

I went out on the Endeavour recently, and as I stood on the front of the ship, looking back to the shore, I wondered what Australia would have been like if Cook and his men had heard the voices of Australia’s first people; if they’d appreciate­d the breadth and depth of traditiona­l knowledge and engaged in a true sharing of ideas and technologi­es.

That Australia would be a very different place.

It’s the right time to start building that vision of Australia and unite our nation. None of us should be in fear of new discoverie­s, and this is a story about discovery.

Not the discovery of land by England, but all Australian­s discoverin­g their true history.

I believe that through this, we can truly discover ourselves. Alison Page is an award-winning creative at the forefront of contempora­ry Australian Aboriginal design and storytelli­ng.

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 ??  ?? ON DECK: Australian National Maritime Museum marine archaeolog­ist James Hunter next to the replica Endeavour in Pyrmont, Sydney.
ON DECK: Australian National Maritime Museum marine archaeolog­ist James Hunter next to the replica Endeavour in Pyrmont, Sydney.

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