Black rights fighter and people's poet
By Bill Mason and Maurice Sibelle
BRISBANE - Oodgeroo Noonuccal, formerly known as Kath Walker, the popular
poet and Aboriginal rights activist, died at Greenslopes Hospital on
September 16 at the age of 72 after a struggle with cancer.
Her death came just three months after the final performance at the Cremorne
Theatre here of the play One Woman's Song, celebrating her life and work.
In 1964, she became the first Aborigine to have a book of poetry, We Are
Going, published.
Formerly a member of the Communist Party, and a long-time campaigner for
Aboriginal land rights and other progressive causes, she was once state
secretary of the Queensland Council for the Advancement of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islanders.
In the '60s, when Aborigines were not even recorded in the census, Oodgeroo
campaigned for recognition, despite the close scrutiny of the infamous
Queensland Special Branch. It was a brave act for an Aborigine to campaign
in those times. In Queensland law, the authorities were able to declare any
Aborigine ``in need of assistance''. That person would then come``under the
act'' and could be forcibly removed to another area.
``Kath spared nobody her criticism'', recalled Bob Anderson, a Brisbane
tribal elder. ``Politicians, church people or prime ministers were told when
it was justified.''
Anderson recalls a meeting Kath had with the then prime minister, Bob
Menzies. After introductions, Menzies offered his guest a drink, to which
she replied, ``You could be arrested for offering an Aborigine a drink''.
She changed her name by deed poll in 1987 to Oodgeroo of the Noonuccal tribe
from Stradbroke Island, in protest at plans for the 1988 Bicentennial
celebrations. The late Don Brady, a respected tribal elder, bestowed the
name Oodgeroo on her because she was always writing. Oodgeroo means paper
bark.
In 1988, she returned her MBE to the Queensland governor, stating: ``Since
1970, I have lived in the hope that the parliaments of England and Australia
would confer and attempt to rectify the terrible damage done to the
Australian Aborigines.
``The forbidding of our tribal language, the murders, the poisonings, the
scalpings, the denial of land custodianship, especially our spiritual sacred
sites, the destruction of our sacred places ...
``This year, 1988, marks 200 years of rape and carnage, all those terrible
things that the Aboriginal tribes of Australia have suffered.
``From the Aborigine's point of view, what is there to celebrate? So I can
no longer, with a clear conscience, accept the English honour.''
She was fond of young people, and people of all races called her Aunty Kath.
Oodgeroo Noonuccal will be widely mourned, both in the Black community and
among Australians generally, for her poetry and her life as a resolute
fighter for Aboriginal rights.