Collective Guilt: Detentions, and the History of Australia

in #colonisation6 years ago

Introduction


Hi All.

Before I begin, I just want to thank anyone who left a comment or an upvote on my last post which introduced myself. I really appreciate it. Having people leaving a comment or upvote shows me the kindness of the community, and how they treat new writers. Thank you.


The Post


The thesis for this post is a simple 4 word phrase:

I hate collective guilt.

One of the earliest examples of collective guilt for myself and many others would be school. Class detentions are quite common in schools, and the logic behind them is somewhat valid. If the teacher cannot determine the culprit of a particular thing that one or a few students have done, then punishing the entire class would mean that the guilty parties will have their punishment. Problem solved, right?

However, the issue that arises from this are the students within the class that have done nothing wrong, the innocent ones who are punished for another person or peoples sake. These students have their time wasted, and are treated as potentially being the ones who did something to disrupt the class, when they haven't.

Class detentions are an example of collective guilt, but the consequences aren't really that bad. If you haven't done anything wrong and are blamed for it, it's a simple issue to fix. Talk to your parents or carers, followed by the principal and in most cases, it'll be sorted out the next day. But this post's intention is not to focus on class detentions. Rather, it is to discuss some other types of collective guilt that are more serious and are worth discussing.

I think a form of collective guilt I want to go after is the collective guilt that surrounds white people. For Australia, which is where I live, we are all taught about the history of Australia. Australia was initially inhabited by Aboriginal people, who lived off the land rather than on the land. Meaning that the idea of "property" was a foreign concept to them. They were, put simply, nomads.



The British arrived in Australia via boat and landed at Botany Bay in January of 1788. Long story cut short, the Europeans colonised the country, due to the belief that the land was terra nullius, meaning "no mans land".

Why is this relevant though?

The reason for me bringing this up is this notion that non-indigenous people need to feel guilty for the actions that happened in the past. There's this strange narrative that 230 years after the British first colonised Australia, people who are non-indigenous must feel guilt and shame for the past.

I have no issue with Indigenous people and I don't have an issue with learning about the past of Australia. There were some terrible things that occurred to the Aboriginal people and I am certainly not denying that those things happened. An example would be the Stolen Generation, which had Aboriginal children stolen from their parents. I'm not dismissing the horrible actions, I simply have a problem with this collective guilt that some people seem to apply for all white Australians.

We as white Australians are not responsible for colonisation.

The two examples which I've listed, classroom detentions and the history of Australia are remarkably different, but very similar at the same time. Different because obviously, a classroom detention is a non-issue when compared to the colonisation of Australia and the death of Aboriginal people. However, the two examples have a common link, a group of people are collectively blamed for the actions of a few.

We are individuals, it doesn't matter what collective group we belong to. Whether you are white, black, asian, male, female, transgender, straight, gay, lesbian, bisexual, etc, it doesn't matter.

What matters is what WE do.

It matters what WE say.

The actions of the collective groups we belong to do not define who or what we are.


Endnote


Thanks for reading. If you have any criticisms, leave it as a comment and I'll be sure to read it.

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You must recognize that the Australian people are still disgracing traditions and aboriginal culture: owning once aboriginal land and using it to make shopping malls, to mine its resources etc is disgraceful.

Anyone who actively complies with Australian, or most of the materialist government systems from around the world are blatantly supporting the continual oppression of any creative, peaceful, non-corrupted cultural development. Break the chain.

Science is worshiped and chanted in our modern societies where the "creative industries" are passed off as advertisement positions in place of real creative endeavors.

The aboriginal people are not, and were not just a race, they are a culture and way of life. The wrongdoing of modern Australian culture will eventually be repaid, Newtons third law applies to the human race and it's actions in this universe.

I do not have to raise a finger, modern society is losing its life force.

(Industry, government, law sounds nice at first but it is a Faustian deal, we are children stumbling before we can walk, fall so we can rise again.)

https://open.spotify.com/track/2AyyksojWuUzPfVrrr1HqB?si=3fTzornsRjaFZvSZ8sPlZg

I'm fully aware that Aboriginal culture and tradition have been disgraced by the colonisers. What I disagree with is this idea of collective guilt for ALL Australians.

The fact is that if the Europeans hadn't colonised Australia, another country would have. It was an inevitability. I'm not saying that the colonisation was right, I fully understand that Australia was the Aboriginal people's land, but it was going to happen regardless of which country did it.

If you define yourself as Australian, you must take on the responsibility that follows. You do not have to call yourself Australian. You can just be yourself, you are a child of the universe, you belong to yourself alone.

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