Newsletter

Print

SOCIETY

'From Little Things Big Things Grow' by Paul Kelly & Kev Carmody: Illustrations by Peter Hudson & Gurindji schoolchildren

The Monthly | Noted | December 2008 - January 2009 | Add a Comment

This is the book of the song that has become the anthem of the reconciliation movement. A century after the birth of Vincent Lingiari and 20 years after his death, the walkout of stockmen he led at Wave Hill Station in 1966 and its triumphant resolution in 1975 remains a turning point in Australian history: the translation of the Aboriginal-rights movement from theoretical expressions of good intentions into the practical outcome of land rights.

The struggle of the Gurindji people has had many spin-offs over the years: the book The Unlucky Australians, by their great supporter Frank Hardy, who also introduced the eye surgeon Fred Hollows to the strikers and sparked his altruistic career; the song ‘Gurindji Blues', by Ted Egan; and the iconic photo of Gough Whitlam pouring sand into Lingiari's hands. But it is the Kelly-Carmody work that has gone into folklore, and which was triumphantly revived when Kevin Rudd restarted the reconciliation process with his apology to the Stolen Generations.

And now it is a book, wonderfully illustrated by the Gurindji kids in their settlements at Daguragu and Kalkarinji, and by the Queensland artist Peter Hudson. It's all about the song, of course, and there is even a translation into the Gurindji language, itself now endangered. Martin Flanagan has contributed a useful and optimistic introduction, and all proceeds from the book will be returned to fund projects for Gurindji youth. Appropriately, the project took place under the patronage of Tom Uren, a Whitlam minister who has been with the Gurindji from the start of their struggle.

This is a book of huge symbolic importance, a reminder of a groundbreaking triumph of the past and a message of hope and exhortation for the future: "That was the story of Vincent Lingiari / But this is the story of something much more / How power and privilege cannot move a people / Who know where they stand and stand in the law." When he received the sand from his prime minister, the old stockman said simply, "We be mates now." But we're not, not really; there is still much to do. To remind us just how much, this book should be in every Australian library, office, classroom and home.

 
Print
Read the latest MONTHLY with a subscription — SUBSCRIBE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Twitter
@THEMONTHLY @SLOWTV

"To educated liberals of almost any description, Santorum is an abomination." @TNYJohnCassidy on a likely candidate: http://t.co/errILxMo
Thursday, 9 February 2012 - 4:30pm
Article on superior French parenting may be the 'tiger mom' piece of 2012: http://t.co/fZks8aPC
Thursday, 9 February 2012 - 4:10pm
Today's Shortlist (via @THEMONTHLY): http://t.co/nT7lSNBD
Thursday, 9 February 2012 - 3:47pm
"Scruton is sceptical of international treaties to reduce emissions." Peter Singer reviews 'Green Philosophy': http://t.co/7ePvu9A8
Thursday, 9 February 2012 - 1:41pm
twitter
 

Site Highlights



POLITICS
Human Rights (186)
Racism (92)
Australian Politics (88)
Feminism (88)
Robert Manne (68)
Obama (56)
Islam (52)
American Politics (48)
Censorship (44)
Multiculturalism (39)
Consumerism (36)
Pokies (30)
Stolen Generations (28)
Childcare (26)
Freedom of Speech (26)
Prime Ministers (20)
Political Parties (19)
Liberalism (18)
Social Justice (18)
History of Australia (18)
Germaine Greer (17)
Waleed Aly (17)
Gay Marriage (16)
SOCIETY
Australian History (108)
Travel (98)
Ethics (68)
Asylum Seekers (56)
Lawyers (52)
Gender (51)
Neuroscience (50)
Anthropology (45)
Capitalism (45)
Sexuality (45)
Aboriginal People (41)
Facebook (30)
Australian Society (30)
Scholars (29)
Homosexuality (24)
Muslim (23)
Clive Hamilton (23)
Decision-making (22)
Sociology (22)
Alice Springs (21)
Gambling (20)
Historians (20)
State Library of Victoria (18)
Neuropsychology (16)
CULTURE
Theatre (160)
Literature (145)
Fiction (138)
Hollywood (108)
Memoir (106)
Arts (87)
Biography (86)
Photography (80)
Painting (79)
Humour (77)
Library (64)
Comedy (58)
Musicians (56)
Opera (53)
Football (50)
Dance (47)
Architecture (38)
Short Stories (30)
Philosophy (25)
Autobiography (24)
20 Australian Masterpieces (22)
Cooking (21)
Modern Masterpieces (20)
Aussie Masterpieces (20)
Top 20 Arts Masterpieces (20)
Arts Masterpieces (20)
Art (19)
Australian Film (19)
Jazz (18)
Directors (16)
WORLD
China (199)
Iraq (114)
India (64)
Ireland (62)
Afghanistan (60)
World economy (60)
England (58)
Britain (54)
Middle East (54)
France (53)
Asia (51)
New York City (50)
Africa (46)
Barack Obama (46)
New Zealand (42)
Egypt (41)
Foreign Policy (41)
Pakistan (39)
World War II (38)
Germany (37)
New York Times (36)
George W Bush (34)
Indonesia (34)
Italy (34)
Russia (33)
Eurozone (31)
Iran (30)
Terrorism (29)
European Union (28)
California (27)
Aid (26)
United Nations (26)
East Timor (24)
Taliban (23)
Israel (22)
Communism (22)
Libya (22)
Egyptian revolution (21)
Beijing (19)
American Military (16)
Thailand (16)
Nuclear power (16)
Greece (16)
Libyan uprising (16)
ENVIRONMENT
Climate Change (266)
Nuclear (142)
Energy (116)
Drought (76)
Global Warming (57)
Sustainability (46)
Tasmania (43)
Dogs (42)
ETS (26)
Amazon (24)
Carbon dioxide (24)
Conservation (22)
Rainforest (20)
Emissions trading (20)
Carbon tax (17)
Water crisis (16)
Carbon emissions (16)
Nuclear Energy (16)
Ecology (16)
Horses (16)
ECONOMICS
Business (152)
Australian Economy (77)
The Global Financial Crisis (66)
European debt (41)
Wall Street (39)
Finance (38)
Globalisation (37)
Global Financial Crisis (34)
Global finance (32)
Recession (26)
Unemployment (20)
Food Production (18)
Stock Market (16)
Population growth (16)
MEDIA
ABC (102)
Journalism (87)
Australian Media (55)
Rupert Murdoch (46)
Radio National (40)
Quarterly Essay (37)
Fairfax (33)
News Corporation (31)
Google (29)
Wikileaks (27)
Social Media (25)
News Limited (24)
Communications (23)
Twitter (23)
Assange (22)
Guardian (21)
Phone-hacking scandal (21)
Julian Assange (18)
Crikey (16)
The Australian newspaper (16)
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Brain (71)
Drugs (56)
Psychology (41)
Evolution (32)
Biology (27)
Genetics (21)
Disease (19)
Flu (17)