Category: Statements

  • Statement on the proposed First Nations Voice to Parliament

    Statement on the proposed First Nations Voice to Parliament

    Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are the most incarcerated, shortest-lived, and least materially wealthy populations in Australia. Contemporary Australia is built on the dispossession and subjugation of Indigenous people. It appropriates Indigenous culture when it is convenient and destroys it when it is not.  

    In May 2017, over 250 Indigenous people from across Australia and the Torres Strait met at Uluru. The Uluru Statement from the Heart called for Voice, Treaty, and Truth. Australians will now vote in a referendum on whether to enshrine within the Australian constitution a First Nations Voice to Parliament as a first step. 

    A Voice alone will not be enough to heal this country and will not solve Indigenous dispossession. The Australian people are merely being asked to listen to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people on issues that affect them. 

    We note that yet another national debate about whether a subjugated minority should control their own lives has profound impacts on the mental and physical safety of those whose lives are being debated. We encourage GLAM workers to look out for Indigenous colleagues and friends, centre Indigenous perspectives, and above all to listen to and provide space for Indigenous voices – both in the lead up to the Voice referendum and beyond it in our everyday professional and personal lives. 

    As the custodians of much of the country’s historical records, cultural artefacts, and the stories Australians tell about ourselves, the GLAM community has a particular responsibility at this time. Listening to First Nations voices in our own work means understanding and following the principles outlined in the Indigenous Archives Collective’s Position Statement on the Right of Reply to Indigenous Knowledges and Information held in archives. For many GLAM workers, our work also involves helping members of the broader community to understand events and processes happening today. Below we have compiled a short list of resources to help people trying to understand why the referendum is occurring and what it is about. 

    newCardigan Committee, 11 September 2023

    Further Information 

    The Uluru Statement From the Heart: https://ulurustatement.org/training 

    Indigenous constitutional recognition and representation (Parliamentary Library): https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/BriefingBook46p/IndigenousRecognition 

    Everything you need to know about The Voice (video, ABC): https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-04-11/everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-voice/102208504  

    Guide to the Voice to Parliament (Deakin University): https://deakin.libguides.com/voice-to-parliament 

    Your Answer Matters (AEC): https://www.aec.gov.au/referendums/aec/your-answers-matter.html 

    Bundjalung-Yorta Yorta man John Patten explaining the Voice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIqxWDQzNm8 

  • Statement on the protection of the Djab Wurrung sacred trees

    Statement on the protection of the Djab Wurrung sacred trees

    The newCardigan Committee stand in solidarity with the Djab Wurrung people who are fighting to protect the sacred trees on country. On 27 October 2020 the Victorian government sanctioned the destruction of a 350 year old Yellowbox, the Directions Tree. More sacred trees are currently under threat of destruction to make way for the upgrade to the Western Highway, Victoria. 

    Sacred trees should be protected as cultural heritage sites. Many people in the newCardigan community who work in the GLAM (galleries, libraries, archives, museums) sector, work hard to protect our cultural heritage. However, cultural heritage is not only the artefacts, specimens, books, papers, and objects found within our collections, but exists in culturally significant sites across Australia. It must be safeguarded and protected for future generations.

    We acknowledge the leadership of the Australian Society of Archivists, our friends and colleagues, for posting the Statement: Djab Wurrung directions tree destruction.

    To the Djab Wurrung people: We are with you.

    To the newCardigan community: Get vocal and call Daniel Andrews on (03) 9651 5000 and say “I’m calling to register my protest against the works on Djab Wurrung country”. If you reach a voicemail, remember to leave your full name and postcode. 

    To the Victorian government: Shame on you. Listen to the voices of First Peoples who have cared for this land for over 65,000 years.

    Kassi Hays
    Andrew Kelly
    Nik McGrath
    Clare Presser
    Hugh Rundle

    For information on how to take action in protecting the sacred trees on Djab Wurrung country see https://dwembassy.com