Social Justice Report 1998 : Chapter 3: Church Responses
Social Justice Report 1998
Chapter 3: Church Responses
- Introduction
- Diversity
of opinion - Factors
affecting church responses - Reconciliation
- Recommendations
with particular reference to the Churches
We must all
face the truth of the past. It lives on in us. We must learn from
it and deal with it, so that there may be justice, reconciliation,
healing and hope for the future. We therefore recognise this crucial
moment in the history of the Canberra Baptist Church as a God given
opportunity for us:to approach
the local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community and publicly
express our sorrow for the hurt that has occurred;to acknowledge
that by silent acquiescence, by moral insensitivity or ignorance we
are partly responsible for that hurt;and to commit
ourselves to do all we can to make sure that such things will not
occur again.Apology offered
by Canberra Baptist Church to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
People, December 14, 1997.
Introduction
There is a long-standing
relationship between the churches and Indigenous people. Any responsible
account of that relationship must acknowledge both its positive and
negative aspects. The National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Children from their Families came at a time
when churches had already begun to grapple with issues arising from
the effects of missions on the lives and cultures of Indigenous people.
The release of Bringing Them Home accelerated this process by
vividly confronting many church members with the details of the instrumental
role played by the churches in the separation of Indigenous children
from their families.
This chapter outlines
various church responses to the Inquiry and the recommendations of Bringing
Them Home. Resource constraints governed our research and extensive
consultation was not possible. It is important to point out that the
church responses identified here are Christian. This is not to say non-Christian
churches or religious groups have not also made responses. Our focus
on Christian churches was determined by the role they played in the
removal of Indigenous children from their families and communities.
The substance of the chapter is drawn from a selection of public materials,
media releases, statements and apologies made by churches and church-based
organisations. It is not exhaustive but rather indicates the character
of responses formulated by institutions that played such a central role
in implementing the laws, practices and policies of assimilation.
Diversity of opinion
One clear theme
that has emerged in assessing the churches' responses is the diversity
of opinions, particularly at the local level. The churches' responses
must be viewed in the context of debate within their congregations.
While some groups
may find their church's response minimal, others would argue that some
action has been too radical. The public responses certainly reflect
the overall engagement of a great number of people constituting the
membership of the various churches.
There are those
who do not recognise the significance or relevance of the Inquiry and
Report. There are also those who are aware but who refuse to be drawn
into a 'cause' for Indigenous people. There are perceptions that responses,
particularly apologies, reflect too adversely on the character of the
churches of previous times. There are members who refuse to have anything
to do with 'symbolic acts of reconciliation'.
There are also
those who express a deep concern for the plight and ongoing struggle
of Indigenous Australians. Within the churches there are non-Indigenous
people working for the rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people, as well as Indigenous groups engaged in the struggle for recognition,
reconciliation and social justice.
As Christians,
we apologise that this happened in our country and communities and
offer those affected our moral, emotional and spiritual support.Seventh-Day
Adventist Church statement on 'The Stolen Generation', November 20,
1997.
This diversity
of opinion and perspective within individual churches, as well as distinctive
denominational positions, has contributed to the debate surrounding
the responses of religious institutions to Bringing Them Home.
Factors affecting church
responses
From one perspective,
churches can be seen as microcosms of society, constituted by lay and
non-lay members within structures extending throughout Australia. They
also possess an international dimension with values and organisational
structures that transcend national boundaries. However, their responses
to the Inquiry are influenced to some degree by their membership of
institutions that were intimately involved in the processes of separation
and removal.
The Australian
Catholic Social Justice Council feels great sorrow for the pain and
anguish of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families affected
by the former government policy of forcibly removing indigenous children
from their families. Many Catholics didn't know much about this practice
until the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission conducted
its National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Children from Their Families. We now understand that
many indigenous Australians have been deeply hurt by this experience.
The brave telling of personal stories at the Inquiry's hearings tore
at the hearts of mothers and fathers. We are all someone's children.Today the
Australian Catholic Social Justice Council acknowledges our Church's
part in these events and offers the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people, and especially the 'stolen generation', our sincere regret.
We hope through this acknowledgement of the truth of the past to take
another step together on the path to healing.The Australian
Catholic Social Justice Council of the Catholic Church in Australia,
statement on National Sorry Day, May 26, 1998.
The churches are
institutions with a large majority of non-Indigenous members and their
responses to Bringing Them Home reflect this composition, evidenced
by the overwhelming tendency toward apology. In this respect their responses
can be seen as intertwined with, or forming a subset of, the broader
non-Indigenous community response. However, the churches are not only
comprised of non-Indigenous people, and any representation of their
responses must incorporate the reactions of their Indigenous members.
Indigenous people's
position within the churches is distinctive for a number of reasons.
First, it was Indigenous people who were so devastated by the policies
of forcible removal. In many cases Indigenous members of churches were
themselves the subjects of removal. Second, Indigenous people are parishioners
and members of church communities that are endeavouring, as institutions,
to come to terms with the history of involvement in these practices.
Third, Indigenous people have reported that within the churches they
are often seen, somewhat unrealistically, as representing all Indigenous
Australians and are therefore expected to be experts on drafting apologies
and developing policies regarding the recommendations of Bringing
Them Home. In combination these factors result in a complex and
sometimes difficult dynamic of personal responses by Indigenous people
within the churches.
The churches hold
a unique position as contemporary social institutions and custodians
of ethical values. As such, their responses hold a particular significance
and carry a special influence. Regarded from an institutional framework,
the position of the churches in some ways parallels the position of
governments. The instrumental role of the churches in carrying assimilation
policies into effect on behalf of governments creates an interesting
point of comparison between church and some government attitudes towards
acknowledging institutional responsibility for past practices. It throws
light on different understandings of the issue of accepting contemporary
corporate responsibility, and the appropriateness of making a formal
apology.
...We regret
that the government has not found room in its heart to apologise,
or to pay any specific compensation to groups and individuals for
the damages caused by the past policies. We appeal to the government
to reconsider. No sum of money has the power to heal the wounds caused
to individuals and to the Indigenous peoples as a whole, if not accompanied
by an apology. While the government refuses to apologise this issue
will continue as a cancer in the nation, and the whole nation - Indigenous
and non-Indigenous - will continue to suffer. What was done cannot
be undone, but we can end the silence. We can stop turning our heads
away.Open letter
to the Prime Minister from leaders of the Uniting Church in Australia,
December 19, 1997.
Reconciliation
Since 1988, the
bi-centenary of first settlement, or Governor Philip's arrival in Australia,
churches have been dealing seriously with the dispossession and marginalisation
of Indigenous peoples. In some ways, the churches were better prepared
than the rest of society to respond to the issues raised by the Inquiry
regarding the effects of past policies and the treatment of Indigenous
Australians. The negative impacts of native missions on Indigenous people
had already been recognised, as were the complexities of reconciling
good intentions and genuine concern for the welfare of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander people with actions which resulted in the denial
of their human rights. Dealing with the past, while continuing to play
a major influence in the lives of many Indigenous people, seems to have
sharpened the conscience of many church leaders and members of church
communities.
In dealing with
issues of the past, present and the future, placed in the context of
a broad societal discussion of the rights of Indigenous people, the
churches have become major participants in the process of reconciliation.
There is an awareness that active engagement with Indigenous people
as partners is essential to the process. For many non-Indigenous church
members there is a merging of broad themes. The specific matters reported
on in Bringing Them Home are seen as connected with the historical
dispossession and general marginalisation of Indigenous people which
transcend the particular recommendations of the Inquiry. The issues
of dispossession, marginalisation, disadvantage and the recognition
of contemporary rights can only be met by a wider response.
We are ashamed
that we have failed to recognise the extent of dispossession, deprivation
and trauma over the past 200 years. We have been and are part of the
culture that has dominated, dehumanised and devalued Aboriginal religious,
cultural and family life. For this we are deeply sorry and express
our heartfelt apology to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Australians. We commit ourselves to working towards a reconciled Australia.Quaker Sorry
Statement to the Indigenous People of Australia. January, 1998.
Churches are involved
in the education of the broader community as well as educating their
parishioners. A great deal of church action occurs through local groups.
Such groups may be made up of different denominations gathering to show
ecumenical, or at least trans-denominational support for Indigenous
people. A significant leadership role may be taken at a higher level
or through special interest groups within a denomination.
...We, the
Catholic Bishops of Australia, wish to take the opportunity offered
by this occasion of remembrance to ask the victims of the policy of
breaking up indigenous families their forgiveness for any part the
Church may have played in causing them harm and suffering. We note
with regret that lamentable chapter of Australian history which saw
the unjustifiable separation of Indigenous children from their families.
We express our deepest sorrow for the suffering and hurt inflicted
on Indigenous Australians which have consequences still in evidence
today - social dislocation, loss of culture and identity, and a continuing
sense of hopelessness in the lives of many of the First Peoples of
our nation...In the spirit of sorrow and forgiveness, we, the Catholic
Bishops of Australia, wish to record our commitment to continue the
healing process for the benefit of the victims of the unjust policies
of the past, to support the needs of indigenous peoples today, and
to contribute to the quest for national reconciliation.Australian
Catholic Bishops Conference Statement on National Sorry Day, May 26,
1998.
Recommendations with particular
relevance to the Churches:
6. Acknowledgement and apology; 8a. School education; 10. Genocide convention; 23. Joint records taskforces; 38. Private collections; 39. Application of minimum standards and common guidelines; 40. Counselling services; 41. Land holdings; 42. Social Justice. |
The recommendations
particularly relevant to the churches cannot be exhaustively stated.
In one sense they may all be supported by the churches. None lie within
their exclusive providence. There have been specific responses made
at many levels with varying degrees of involvement and commitment to
specific action.
We will continue
to be in solidarity with the Australian Aboriginal peoples as they
seek a 'fair go'. We stand also with the churches in Australia as
they play their part in addressing these issues where basic human
values are at stake.Rev. Dr Konrad
Raiser, General Secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC),
March 4, 1998.
Churches have responded
at a national level with apologies from all major denominations.
On behalf
of the Anglican Church of Australia the General Synod apologises unreservedly
and seeks forgiveness for any part played, knowingly or unwittingly,
by the Anglican Church that has ever contributed in any way to that
hurt or trauma by the unjustified removal of Aboriginal or Torres
Strait Islander children from their families, and for our past silence
on this issue.Anglican Church
of Australia, passed at General Synod meeting, Adelaide, February
1998.
Churches have expressed
apology at state and regional levels.
We confess
that our failure to see what we were doing denied our common humanity,
degraded us all, and was not Christian. For all this we are truly
sorry and apologise unreservedly.Apology from
the Victorian Baptist Union, presented March 13, 1998.
Local congregations,
particular communities and specific interest groups have responded directly.
Today the
Australian Catholic Social Justice Council acknowledges our Church's
part in these events and offers the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people, and especially the 'stolen generation', our sincere regret.
We hope through this acknowledgement of the truth of the past to take
another step together on the path to healing.The Australian
Catholic Social Justice Council of the Catholic Church in Australia,
statement on National Sorry Day, May 26, 1998.
In many local congregations
there was a desire to express a broader message of sorrow and regret
for the historical position of Indigenous people. Apologies addressing
the removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children acted
as a catalyst for wider apologies as the contemporary representatives
of a people who dispossessed another people. There is an interest in
a broad re-evaluation of the past and a desire to set a new framework
for the future. This sincere grassroots community response recognises
the deeper significance of Bringing Them Home.
We, the people
of the Rosanna Baptist Church, acknowledge the pain and suffering
of Indigenous Australians that occurred as a result of European settlement.
We further confess our ignorance of Indigenous cultures, and our lack
of compassion for Indigenous people in their plight. By our silence
we have allowed this suffering to occur and continue, through the
removal of children from their natural parents and environment, and
by taking over the land without recognition of the nature of the relationship
of Indigenous people to the land, or proper consideration of the impact
on Indigenous people and their culture. We confess also the attitude
of cultural superiority which has undergirded all these actions and
attitudes.For these
things, we unreservedly apologise.Apology from
the Rosanna Baptist Church presented to representatives of the local
Indigenous community and from the Baptist Church
Apologies aside,
there have been other initiatives that represent movement towards restorative
justice. The Uniting Church in Australia has taken steps towards the
restitution of land, and other churches are engaged in discussions to
this end, consistent with recommendation 41. Various statements of apology,
moreover, contain commitments to other forms of specific action. These
statements have emerged from a process of sharing, learning and confronting
the reality of the churches' involvement in the separation and removal
of Indigenous children. They are based on an insight into the experience
of loss and its full human implications. This entry into the perspective
of Indigenous Australians and the recognition of responsibility to redress
the aftermath, speaks of a genuine resolve common to the responses of
Australian churches.
I wish to
offer a heartfelt and unreserved apology to the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples on behalf of the Religious Orders of sisters,
brothers and priests of Australia. We are sorry for the pain you have
suffered because of the forced separation of your children which took
place over many decades. We are deeply sorry for any pain that you
and your children have felt by being placed in our Catholic institutions.
In the light of the National Inquiry Report, we are beginning to understand
some of the devastating effects that government policy had on your
lives and the part we played in implementing these policies. Children
suffered the shocking experience of losing their present and their
past - they lost their parents, families, their language, spirituality,
land and identity. In having their children taken from them, Indigenous
communities were deprived of their future and their hope.We undertake
to offer help where possible for people to trace their records, so
that they may recover their identity and hopefully find their way
home again.We commit
ourselves to be part of the national process of reconciliation in
dialogue with you. We know an apology cannot undo past sufferings.
We want to be part of healing the deep wound which affected Australia
because of past practices. We pray that, walking together, we can
find a new way forward in this land we call home.Apology to
Indigenous People from the Religious Orders of Australia, June 11,
1997.
Nonetheless church
action so far, with few exceptions, has been primarily in the area of
awareness and apology. While this is a positive first step, there is
still much for the churches as institutions, communities of faith, and
as distinct sections of society, to initiate. The apologies are a response
to one of the recommendations of the Inquiry report. There are several
others that remain to be addressed.
3
April 2003.