The Borneo Post

Monument push for Australia’s ‘Black Power’ hero

-

SYDNEY: A campaign was launched Wednesday for a monument to recognise an unsung Australian athlete who supported two Americans in their famous Black Power salute at the 1968 Olympics.

Peter Norman, silver medallist in the 200m at Mexico City, stood on the podium alongside US sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who both put a blackglove­d fist in the air in a civil rights protest.

He backed their gesture and wore an Olympic Project for Human Rights badge in support, but was then frozen out of future Games selection and airbrushed from Australian Olympic history until recently.

“His contributi­on to racial equality has never really been recognised in this country,” Peter Norman Commemorat­ion Committee convenor Joseph Toscano told AFP.

“I think Australian society has changed. I think we are seeing the rise of political movements and organisati­ons promoting racial inequality and hatred.

“We felt that it’s important... to recognise not just Peter Norman and his family, but also the stand he took because every man, every woman who stands up makes a difference.”

The push follows American protests over Confederat­e statues that hark back to the nation’s slave- owning past, although Toscano said the campaign was not sparked by the US debate over monuments.

Norman’s family are patrons of the committee, and his daughter Janita said he would support moves to recognise the stand he took.

“It would have never been something he asked for himself,” Janit a Norman told loc a l newspaper the Riverine Herald.

“He was never one for selfrecogn­ition, but our family all agreed this is something he would’ve wanted. He was proud of the stand he took... Even 50 years on the message has such an importance and is still relevant now.”

Norman, who died in 2006 aged 64, hailed from Melbourne and his supporters hope a “significan­t interactiv­e monument” can be erected in the city.

Toscano said they would like to set up an internatio­nal competitio­n to choose a design. Norman is more widely recognised in the US than Australia, with the USA Track and Field Federation declaring the day of his funeral – Oct 9 – as Peter Norman Day.

In 2012, Canberra passed a motion of apology to Norman “for the treatment he received upon his return to Australia, and the failure to fully recognise his inspiratio­nal role before his untimely death in 2006”.

Australian Olympic officials deny Norman was ever blackliste­d or shunned, and was only cautioned at the time to be careful about his public statements. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on October 17, 1968 shows US athletes Tommie Smith (centre) and John Carlos raising their gloved fists in the Black Power salute to express their opposition to racism in the USA during the US national anthem, after receiving their medals for first and third place in the men’s 200m event at the Mexico Olympic Games. At left is Peter Norman of Australia who took second place. — AFP photo
This file photo taken on October 17, 1968 shows US athletes Tommie Smith (centre) and John Carlos raising their gloved fists in the Black Power salute to express their opposition to racism in the USA during the US national anthem, after receiving their medals for first and third place in the men’s 200m event at the Mexico Olympic Games. At left is Peter Norman of Australia who took second place. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia