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Authentic Friendships Analysis

Decent Essays

Authentic and genuine friendships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians are a powerful symbol of reconciliation for all Australians. While creating these friendships can be challenging, the benefits they provide outweigh the struggles. The largest of these challenges being racial discrimination towards Indigenous Australians. Authentic friendships seem unlikely when we look at Australia’s actions towards Indigenous peoples in the past. It has been a long journey for Indigenous and non-Indigenous friendships as only a few decades ago they were shameful and almost impossible to form. Though these friendships seem unachievable, people have looked past skin colour and created inter-racial friendships that have produced astounding rewards. …show more content…

97% of Aboriginal people experience racism often (Korff, 2015). Racism is experienced on the sporting field, at school or work, walking down the street or by overhearing a racist joke. Racial discrimination towards Indigenous Australians is often caused by a lack of knowledge and exposure to Indigenous peoples and their culture. The school attendance rate for Indigenous children is 77% compared to the school attendance rate for non-Indigenous children of 91% (Korff, 2015). Lower school attendance limits non-Indigenous Australian children from meeting and making friendships with Indigenous children allowing racist stereotypes to perpetuate. Indigenous 25-44 year olds earn on average $310 less than non-Indigenous Australians of the same age group (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2006). A substantial wealth gap between races means non-Indigenous children in private schools have even less exposure to Indigenous peoples as scholarships are often the only way Indigenous children can attend higher fee-paying schools. A lack of exposure to Indigenous people allows 20th-century racism to be carried in the minds of today's youth. Racist ideas towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and lack of contact between Indigenous and non-Ingenious people prevents either side from wanting to create a friendship. Apathy towards creating …show more content…

For most of Australia’s history, non-Indigenous Australians have treated Indigenous Australians as animals, have stolen their land and ignored their culture. It is estimated that the Indigenous population of Australia was reduced by 90% from 1788 to 1900 (Australians Together, 2016). The Indigenous population Tasmania is now almost extinct and the few living descendants are of Indigenous women who were kidnapped by non-Indigenous people (Darlington et. Al, 2012). The main causes of this genocide were disease and violence. Indigenous populations were also partially wiped out by massacres. For example, the Coniston massacre in 1928 in which 31 Indigenous men, women, and children were killed (Barker, 2016). Since Invasion, non-Indigenous Australians have stolen 7.692 million square kilometers of land sacred to Indigenous Australians which they have had to work extremely hard to gain back. In 1976, the first land rights act was passed which recognised Indigenous Australians as the traditional owners of the land in the Northern Territory (Central Land Council, 2007). Indigenous activists fought long and hard for this act and today they are still currently fighting to have all of their land rights officially recognised by the government. In the past The Australian Government has also tried to control the Indigenous population. The

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