The New Zealand Herald

Aboriginal leaders call for Cook statue word change

- — Telegraph Group Ltd

Captain James Cook’s role in Australian history has come under the spotlight as Aboriginal leaders call for a 138-year-old statue of the explorer in Sydney to be changed to remove the claim that he “discovered this territory”.

The debate, inspired by the removal of statues of Confederat­e leaders in the United States, has prompted calls to re-examine the appropriat­eness of other statues in Australia.

Stan Grant, an Aboriginal writer and television journalist, sparked the campaign, saying the engraving on the statue in Hyde Park, Sydney, was a symbol of the invisibili­ty of Aboriginal people in Australia. He said he did not believe the statue should be torn down — though some in the Aboriginal community do — but he wanted the inscriptio­n changed because “clearly [Captain Cook] didn’t discover Australia — Aboriginal people have been here”.

“The inscriptio­n that Cook ‘discovered this territory, 1770’ maintains a damaging myth, a belief in the superiorit­y of white Christendo­m that devastated Indigenous peoples everywhere,” he wrote on the ABC website. “Indigenous people become a postscript to Australian history.” Grant suggested the inscriptio­n could be changed to “he explored this territory” or that it could include mention of Australia’s Aborigines, who are believed to have arrived about 60,000 years earlier. The call was backed by Aboriginal leaders and prompted the City of Sydney’s Lord Mayor to seek advice on this and on a statue of Lachlan Macquarie, a colonial governor accused of ordering a massacre of Aborigines in 1816. But the moves have outraged conservati­ve historians, commentato­rs and MPs. Keith Windschutt­le, historian and editor-inchief of the conservati­ve magazine Quadrant, said the inscriptio­n on the statue was “perfectly accurate” as Aborigines had discovered areas around what is now Sydney but Cook discovered the “whole entity”.

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