AFP, Melbourne :
Thousands of people joined Invasion Day protests in cities across Australia Sunday to mark the beginning of British colonisation of the vast continent.
January 26 is officially recognised as Australia Day, a public holiday to celebrate the origins of the modern nation and is commemorated with fireworks, concerts and citizenship ceremonies.
However, the date is a time of mourning for indigenous Australians, who have inhabited the land for 65,000 years and view the arrival of British settlers in 1788 as heralding two centuries years of pain and suffering.
Annual rallies have steadily grown in size as protesters bring attention to injustices faced by indigenous people and call on the government to change the date of Australia Day.
It was only formally established as a nation-wide celebration in 1994. This year, non-indigenous Australians were asked to give reparations in the form of a donation to the #PayTheRent campaign.
Melbourne rally organiser Lidia Thorpe, a former Victoria state government politician, drew attention to the plight of Aboriginal families who had to pay for the funerals of relatives who died in custody.
“It’s 2020 and we’re still trying to raise money to bury our people. So we’re asking people to pay the rent, you’re on stolen land,” she said.
“It’s time to reparate for the mass injustice that we’ve had as first people of this country.”
Chants of “Always was, always will be, Aboriginal land” rang out as large crowds marched through the city.
Some waved the Aboriginal flag while others held aloft signs with slogans such as “No Pride in Genocide” and “Sovereignty Was Never Ceded”.
One protester, who gave her name only as Sophie, said she believed Australia Day should be abolished entirely rather than simply moved to another date.
“I think any day that has these barbeques and celebrating Aussie pride, I think that’s absolutely inappropriate,” she told AFP.
“I don’t think there’s any day that you can celebrate Australia Day without also celebrating a genocide.”
“We need to heal the ancestors’ spirit for this country to move forward … When that happens this place will change.”
Pay the rent, a concept originally developed in the 1970s by the National Aboriginal and Islander Health Organisation, was reprised for Sunday’s protests as organisers collected donations to help First Nations families pay for funeral costs.
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“Whether you live here, or in Gippsland, or over in Meanjin in Brisbane, you live on Aboriginal land,” Gunnai and Gunditjmara woman Meriki Onus told the crowd in Melbourne. “You have an obligation to pay rent to the local blackfellas of that area.”