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form y separately published work icon Through American Eyes single work   film/TV  
Alternative title: Australia - Through American Eyes; Foreign Correspondent : Australia : Through American Eyes
Issue Details: First known date: 2017... 2017 Through American Eyes
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Race is John Eligon’s beat. He roams America reporting for The New York Times on the tensions, eruptions and occasional triumphs in race relations.

What might he make of relations here between Indigenous Australians and the rest of the country?

'Foreign Correspondent and The New York Times decided to find out by sending Eligon on a journey across Australia.

'As Eligon quickly learns, less than a lifetime ago indigenous Australians weren’t even counted in the Census. For many, “wages” came in rations of flour, sugar and tea. Days and destinies were subject to the whim of bureaucrats and missionaries.

'So, having attained full equality under the law, having scored pivotal victories like native title rights, are Indigenous people truly in control of their lives? What more do they need to do for themselves? Is racism these days rare or routine?

'John Eligon looks for some answers. In Western Australia’s Kimberley region he gets a taste of indigenous life in a remote town.

'There he meets teenagers determined to make something of themselves. But they must rise above frequently unstable home lives and a suicide epidemic that is robbing them of family and friends.

'In the same town Eligon follows a good-hearted cop who is trying to stop kids as young as six turning to crime. An elder takes Eligon on a trip to ancestral lands – and dishes out a scorching critique on “the monster” created by wasted mining royalties.

'Next stop is idyllic Torres Strait, birthplace of legal trailblazer Eddie Mabo. Indigenous people here have more power than any others thanks to Mabo and a unique fishing treaty with Papua New Guinea.

'We’re gonna bloody rock your boat and we’re gonna sink your ship! – Islander fisherman recounting his ultimatum to white commercial fishermen accused of trespassing

'In the Torres Strait John Eligon explores what the pay-off has been for the Islanders and how much autonomy they really have.

On a white sand beach Eddie Mabo’s daughter Gail shows how her dad won his famous case – and channels what she thinks he would say about race relations were he alive today.

'From the tropics Eligon heads to the suburbs – where most Indigenous Australians live. In Brisbane’s gritty Inala, he meets a family that appears to defy the racial stereotypes.

'University lecturer Chelsea, retired cop Matt and their five kids live in a nice house with a pool.

'Some 15 years ago Matt made a fateful decision to join the police force. He wanted to change what he saw as its racist culture.

'That noble effort nearly destroyed him when he fell out with white colleagues over a controversial Aboriginal death in custody.

'As Matt and Chelsea learned over time, the signposts of upward mobility can be illusory.

'But like many of the indigenous people Eligon encounters on his journey, the couple is determined to bridge the racial divide.

'As Chelsea sees it: I think we’re a pretty resilient mob. ' (Production summary)

Notes

  • Created as part of the ABC's Foreign Correspondent series (Series 2017 : 16)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 27 Jun 2017 12:48:41
Subjects:
  • Western Australia,
  • Torres Strait Islands, Queensland,
  • Inala, Darra - Inala - Forest Lake area, Brisbane - South & South West, Brisbane, Queensland,
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