|
National Aboriginal and Islander Day Observance
Committee
Each year NAIDOC Week has a theme. The themes represent
issues important to Indigenous peoples. As you look through this online
exhibition you will see that the themes often reflected issues in the
news that particular year, or corresponded with a United Nations
International Year theme.
The overview below is reproduced from the Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal
Australia, Canberrra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 1994.
NAIDOC
Formerly, National Aborigines Day Observance Committee
(NAIDOC), founded in 1957 to promote the first Sunday in July as a day for
focusing Australians’ attention on the Aboriginal communities in their
midst. The National Missionary Council of Australia (NMCA), since 1940,
had been encouraging churches to observe the Sunday before the Australia
Day weekend as Aboriginal Sunday. The NMCA had taken up a suggestion by
William Cooper, who, following his successful promotion of a ‘day of
mourning’ on Australia Day 1938, had written to the NMCA seeking help in
establishing a permanent Aborigines Day. In 1955 the NMCA changed the
date to the first Sunday in July and secured the support of federal and
state governments, as a result of which NAIDOC was formed. The
establishment of the federal DAA boosted the activities of NAIDOC, which
in 1974 became an all-Aboriginal body.
In 1975 NAIDOC extended Aboriginal Day into National
Aborigines Week, during which the Aboriginal people’s cultural heritage
and contribution t o Australian society are celebrated. Various
activities are arranged for each day of the week wherever it is
celebrated. In more recent years National Aborigines Weeks have followed
particular themes. For instance, t h e 1987 theme was ‘White Australia
has a black history’, a timely reminder to non-Aboriginal Australians as
they entered the year of the bicentenary of European settlement. Since
1976 NAIDOC has run as a federal body and in 1989 the word ‘Islander’ was
added to the title which became the National Aboriginal and Islander
Observance Committee, hence NAIDOC.
Text by Dr Ian Howie-Willis.
|