History Notes
Joseph Stalin
communist leader of Russia
wanted to expand communism in Europe
compromised a lot with Roosevelt and Churchill at Yalta Conference and Potsdam Conference
controlled East Germany + USSR
1946-1953
Winston Churchill
prime minister of England
controlled part of West Germany + West Berlin (English controlled sector)
Franklin Roosevelt
died soon after ww2
more willing to compromise with Stalin than Harry Truman
President of USA 1933-1945
Harry Truman
not willing to compromise with Stalin
hated communism
Kennedy
President of the US
Communist
Eastern Bloc
headed by the Soviet Union
Capitalist
Western Bloc
US and Allies
Communism
classless, moneyless society where there was common ownership as a means of production
state owns the wealth of the country and controls it
ownership of private property is limited
one political party
restricts rights and freedoms
everyone must work for the state
strict censorship
equality for all
Capitalism
private ownership of capital goods
means of production is selling goods and services for profit
individuals own property rather than the government
Socialism
government owns and controls important public services like utilities, healthcare and education
people have equal opportunity
are allowed to own capital goods
Fascism
right wing government system with centralised power allowing no opposition or criticism
involved the USA and USSR in which no direct fighting actually occurred
ideological war between communism and capitalism
Germany was divided after WW2 between Russia, USA, UK and France.
Berlin was also divided into these four zones.
The rest of Europe did not want Germany to take control again
Truman believed that Stalin would encourage a communist revolution across Europe
Truman released the “Truman Doctrine”
World had a choice between communist tyranny and democratic freedom
America would help governments that were threatened by communism by sending troops and economic assistance
America wanted to contain communism within Eastern Europe
USA and USSR were suspicious of each other so they asked for secret reports from embassies
American ambassador reported that Stalin wanted to destroy capitalism and was gathering more military power
Russia reported that the US wanted to dominate the world and that the American public was preparing for war with the USSR
USSR turned many countries around it into satellite states
Definition: countries that are officially independent but are actually being controlled by other states/countries
Stalin turned countries such as Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland into satellite states
Division of Europe and Germany
Yalta Conference - decide on division of Europe
Capitalism v Communism
Germany and Berlin to be divided into 4 zones
Stalin concerned over US possession of Nuclear bombs
Iron curtain fell over Europe dividing East and West
Truman Doctrine
‘free countries’ from communist threat
containment of communist rule
Marshall Plan
financial assistance to help countries rebuild or resist communism through financial aid
Stalin ordered the Eastern Bloc to resist 17 Billion USD
Western Sectors of Berlin and Germany had begun rebuilding after World War 2
Eastern sectors were stripped of any valuables and manufacturing and it was sent back to Russia
standard of living was very poor
23 June 1948 - Soviets blockaded Berlin
Allies continued to supply West Berlin via air
not enough to keep Berlin
Many people donated care packages and chipped in to help keep Berlin alive
Old Nazi soldiers and American soldiers worked together to keep the airlift going
12th May 1949 - First American supply allowed into East Germany
Blockade lasted 11 months
West Berlin had become prosperous from the Marshall Plan
East Berlin had food and shelter, but were not prosperous- no supplies eg. appliances
Soviets took wealth from East Berlin while the West gave lots of money to West Berlin
East and West Germany were separated however since Berlin was surrounded by the whole of East Germany people could travel freely between East and West
The Wall was built because of constant comparisons between East and West Berlin
West Berlin economic boom
Skilled workers were paid high wages - many skilled workers living in the East illegally relocated to West Berlin
3M skilled workers went to the West
Walter Ulbricht warned Krushchev in July 1961 that it had to be stopped
Western countries were using West berlin as a way of spying on communist countries
Berlin represented the wider Cold War struggle - Krushchev wanted to make Berlin neutral however Kennedy refused
13 August 1961
50,000 East German Police with machine guns lined the border between East and West Berlin with barbed wire
followed the exact border of each zone
Permanent wall was build over the next few days with concrete slabs, searchlights, minefields, watch towers and machine gun posts
200 people died trying to cross the wall
Eastern Response
East Berlin - escapes and migration
East Berliners were trapped in East Berlin or those who had crossed the border over the weekend had been permanently separated
those who tried to escape were shot
Western Response
Middle of the night and weekend in Washington, French were on summer vacation
Quick decisions could not be made and Allies were powerless
Kennedy would not start a war over Berlin
Checkpoint Charlie
only border crossing for Westerners to enter East Berlin
Exchange point for spies
SUPER TENSE PART OF THE COLD WAR
snr american diplomat Allan Lightner was refused access to East Berlin to go to the theatre because he hadn’t shown his passport
American troops escorted him and his wife into East Berlin
Allied leaders decided to test the East Germans
Battle ready soldiers would escort US civillians into the East on meaningless excursions holding guns just to prove a point
Krushchev was not happy
sent 33 tanks into East Berlin
Brandenburg Gate
Checkpoint Charlie
Soviet tanks pointed cannons at the US tanks
everyone was on full alert
Commanders were concerned that an impulse decision would start real conflict
16 hours later the tension was broken when a soviet tank reversed 5 metres and began a withdrawal of all the tanks
Significant Outcomes of the Berlin Wall
Transformed the Cold war and became the primary symbol of Cold War tensions
Berlin became a principled issue in the war
both sides did not want to lose power in berlin
30 year policy called detente - where defined communist territory was tolerated by the US
uneasy calm on Europe- both sides knew they would never change their views
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
created with western countries to contain communism and protect countries under communist threat
Warsaw Pact
communism countries
created in response to NATO
significance of Cuba
145km from Miami/Florida
US had invested lots of money into Cuba
1959 - Anti Capitalist Fidel Castro led a revolution and took power by force
anti imperialist
turned to communism early 1960s
asked for financial assistance - US refused so Cuba made a deal with the USSR
The Bay of Pigs
aid was given to Castro’s enemies to invade Cuba and overthrow him
Bag of Pigs was a failure (April 1961)
US used ex-Cubans to invade Cuba, 1500 were killed or wounded
caused great embarrassment to Kennedy’s admin
Why the Bay of Pigs?
MAD - Mutually Assured Destruction
13 Days - Cuban Missile Crisis
October 13th 1962 - order airstrike on missile launch sites and invasion of the island
Cuba and USSR had made a deal
USSR was secretly transporting missiles to Cuba and building launch sites→ threat to US, wanted to counteract the threat from US missiles in Turkey and Italy
US only had a few options that would not be seen as an ‘act of war’
quarantined all packages to Cuba rather than blockading (intercept all shipments)
prevented further missiles being transported
US demanded missile removal - USSR insisted they were only defensive
US Spy plane shot down by Soviets
Soviet nuclear armed Submarine was signalled through a deep sea charge to signal it to come up
operators thought war had begun → too deep to communicate with surface
decision to launch nuclear torpedo had to be made unanimously, 2 commanders said yes 1 commander said no
nuclear torpedo not launched
US set to Def Con 2 - preparing for nuclear attack
Robert Kennedy (defence officer) secretly met with Anatoly Dobrynin (Russian ambassador)
intense negotiations
US would remove Turkey and Italy missiles, and promise to never invade Cuba
USSR would remove all missiles from Cuba under UN inspection
CRISIS AVERTED
admiration for diplomacy
even an impulse decision could have caused a nuclear attack
leaders of enemy countries were able to diplomatically avoid crisis
Domestic Response
CPA - Communist Party of Australia
Menzies wanted to outlaw CPA as he believed there was a threat to national security, peace and stability
Menzies targeted the CPA so that numbers declined steeply
Communist Party Dissolution Act 1950 was passed, however did not pass when taken to the high court as members of the public believed that it undermined democracy to ban a party
also set a precedent to allow the federal government to ban other parties
vote was won 50.56% to 49.44%- not to ban
Australians were very divided on the issue
Communism was feared in Australia
Australians thought that democracy was under threat
Communism was brought closer to Australian borders as much of Eastern Europe and Asia became communist countries
D - Domino Theory
if one country in South East Asia fell to communism, the other countries in the region would gradually fall
communism closer to our borders
A - Allies
Australia’s foreign policy was based on these main ideas
Australia needed to prove itself as a loyal ally - Australia supporting US and Britain in fight against communism
communism posed a threat to Australian security
ANZUS
Australia, NZ and US
September 1951
Military alliance
binds each of the nations through obligation to meet and discuss action to support each other in the event of an attack
Examples of Articles
Article III Parties consult each other whenever, in their opinion, the territorial integrity, political independence, or security of any of the Parties is threatened in the Pacific
Article IV armed attack in the Pacfic Area on any of the parties is dangerous to its own peace and safety
act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes
Guarantee? - no, as US is not in the Pacific
SEATO Alliance
US, UK, France, Australia, NZ, Pakistan, Thailand, Philippines
September 1954
United Anti-Communist states
fear of spread of communism
no longer exists
F - Forward Defence
Meeting threats to Australian security before they came too close
government commit troops to conflicts abroad to halt the spread of communism to prove Australia was a good ally (ANZUS, SEATO)
Justification: maintaining the gap between australia and communism, keeping communism within present boundaries (present at the time)
In practice, Australia became involved in
Korean War
Malaya Emergency
Vietnam War
T - Threat of Communism
Mostly perceived as Communist countries weren’t outwardly attacking other Non-Communist countries
referendum to ban Communist Party
Menzies used ASIO to watch and harass communists or people that were communist
ASIO- Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
Space Race & Arms Race
The Arms Race
nuclear arms were used as a deterrent
hydrogen bombs were 100x more powerful than nuclear bombs
INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE- ICBM
both sides started stockpiling nuclear weapons
turning point in the arms race
US responded by putting missile launch sites in NATO countries such as Turkey and Italy
Spy planes were used as surveillance to monitor use of ICBMs - both sides
MAD- Mutually Assured Destruction
The Space Race
1957 - Sputnik Satellite sent into space
series of one-upmanship between the US and USSR to send a person to space and eventually the moon
countries tried to battle each other for superiority
Space race was a race of ideological superiority between USA and USSR
Impact of the War on the US
CIA- Central Intelligence Agency
KGB- Russia
MI6- UK
the Cold War brings out intelligence agencies in the USSR and USA
1950s - Anti Communist Sentiment was on the rise
fear and scared within the US that communists had infiltrated the government
people were encouraged to dob in communists
espionage and spying was rife at this time
Aboriginal Rights in Australia prior to 1965
Universal Declaration of human rights
set of guidelines that recognise the dignity and equality of all people
Human rights include
free movement
freedom of choice
freedom of speech
freedom of expression (religion)
freedom of conscience
right to work
right to fair treatment under the law
right to education
right to healthcare
right to a nationality
no slavery
public hearing
seek asylum
Terra Nullius - land that belongs to nobody, unoccupied
Settlement- previously uninhabited place where people establish a community
Invasion - invading an occupied country with armed force
Protection - legal or formal measure intended to preserve civil liberties and rights
Self determination - process by which a person controls their own life
Assimilation- forcing a person to conform to the beliefs, rituals and culture of wider society \
paternalism- White saviourism
gov. tried to control the Aboriginal population through ‘parenting’ because they thought they needed protection
the practice by which the government or people of authority deal with Indigenous people the way a father does with a child
Europeans wanted to remove Indigenous people from the land
forced removal, massacres, disease and warfare
Aboriginal people fought to protect their right to the land
special cultural relationship with the land
policy applied using paternalism
imposed strict rules to control Aboriginal People
Established 1883
permission needed for movement
traditional celebrations and customs forbidden
protector controlled their money
permission required to marry, name children and send them to school
limited success in the 1850s with use of reserves
policy recognised Aboriginal relationship with the land- not taking into account tribal areas etc,
Indigenous people lived and worked independently on the reserves, and some retained customs and traditions
some reserve managers were cruel and used violence and intimidation against those living on the reserves
Established as ‘protection’ for the Aboriginal people
Christianise the Indigenous population
made to give up culture, language and spiritual belief
Aboriginal people were attracted to missions because of
food
chance to learn skills
education
home
safety from abuse by some white employers
those who managed the missions were sent by the church, however many Aboriginal people living on these missions did not receive enough food, were overworked and living conditions were poor
forces people to conform to attitudes, customs and beliefs of the majority
Aboriginals who were ‘half caste’ were absorbed into white society
segregation continued under assimilation
child endowment payments granted to families not living a nomadic lifestyle
eligible for old age and invalid pensions
certificate of exemption- step towards citizenship- if they cut off all ties to culture, family, traditions or Aboriginal lifestyle
children forcibly removed from families as part of protection and assimilation
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders with white parents/grandparents were absorbed into white society
A.O Neville wanted to ‘breed out’ the blackness of Aboriginal people
Assimilation meant different things to different people- some thought it means erasing Aboriginal people altogether, others thought it was breeding out their Blackness
de-tribalised- could be educated to a white standard
semi civilised- people who needed passive supervision from the government
uncivilised- people who could be preserved in reserves
Day of Mourning- 1938
Cummeragunja Walk off
Yirrkala Bark Petition
1938 Day of Mourning
26th January 1938
Jack Patten led the day of mourning
150 years after white invasion
demonstration at the arrival site of the first fleet
Jack Patten wrote a 10 point plan for Aboriginal Rights
William Cooper - Formed Australian Aborigines League
Margaret Tucker
Jack Patten + Will Ferguson - Aborigines Progressive Association
AAL+ APA Staged a day of mourning demonstration in Sydney
Cummeragunja Walk off - 1939
Kinchela Aboriginal Boys Home
Arthur McQuiggan - Manager
used intimidation and violence
Jack Patten - born at Cummeragunja
organised a strike
200 Aboriginal People left the reserve without permission
camped on the other side of the river which was under Victorian Jurisdiction
Yirrkala Bark Petition
1963 - Aus. Gov. sold part of Arnhem Land to a mining company
Yolgnu people - local inhabitants
Wangjuk Marika - wrote a petition to the Aus Gov signed by Yolngu elders
First legal document written by Aboriginal People to be recognised by the Australian Government
ultimately unsuccessful but still progress
Joseph Stalin
communist leader of Russia
wanted to expand communism in Europe
compromised a lot with Roosevelt and Churchill at Yalta Conference and Potsdam Conference
controlled East Germany + USSR
1946-1953
Winston Churchill
prime minister of England
controlled part of West Germany + West Berlin (English controlled sector)
Franklin Roosevelt
died soon after ww2
more willing to compromise with Stalin than Harry Truman
President of USA 1933-1945
Harry Truman
not willing to compromise with Stalin
hated communism
Kennedy
President of the US
Communist
Eastern Bloc
headed by the Soviet Union
Capitalist
Western Bloc
US and Allies
Communism
classless, moneyless society where there was common ownership as a means of production
state owns the wealth of the country and controls it
ownership of private property is limited
one political party
restricts rights and freedoms
everyone must work for the state
strict censorship
equality for all
Capitalism
private ownership of capital goods
means of production is selling goods and services for profit
individuals own property rather than the government
Socialism
government owns and controls important public services like utilities, healthcare and education
people have equal opportunity
are allowed to own capital goods
Fascism
right wing government system with centralised power allowing no opposition or criticism
involved the USA and USSR in which no direct fighting actually occurred
ideological war between communism and capitalism
Germany was divided after WW2 between Russia, USA, UK and France.
Berlin was also divided into these four zones.
The rest of Europe did not want Germany to take control again
Truman believed that Stalin would encourage a communist revolution across Europe
Truman released the “Truman Doctrine”
World had a choice between communist tyranny and democratic freedom
America would help governments that were threatened by communism by sending troops and economic assistance
America wanted to contain communism within Eastern Europe
USA and USSR were suspicious of each other so they asked for secret reports from embassies
American ambassador reported that Stalin wanted to destroy capitalism and was gathering more military power
Russia reported that the US wanted to dominate the world and that the American public was preparing for war with the USSR
USSR turned many countries around it into satellite states
Definition: countries that are officially independent but are actually being controlled by other states/countries
Stalin turned countries such as Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland into satellite states
Division of Europe and Germany
Yalta Conference - decide on division of Europe
Capitalism v Communism
Germany and Berlin to be divided into 4 zones
Stalin concerned over US possession of Nuclear bombs
Iron curtain fell over Europe dividing East and West
Truman Doctrine
‘free countries’ from communist threat
containment of communist rule
Marshall Plan
financial assistance to help countries rebuild or resist communism through financial aid
Stalin ordered the Eastern Bloc to resist 17 Billion USD
Western Sectors of Berlin and Germany had begun rebuilding after World War 2
Eastern sectors were stripped of any valuables and manufacturing and it was sent back to Russia
standard of living was very poor
23 June 1948 - Soviets blockaded Berlin
Allies continued to supply West Berlin via air
not enough to keep Berlin
Many people donated care packages and chipped in to help keep Berlin alive
Old Nazi soldiers and American soldiers worked together to keep the airlift going
12th May 1949 - First American supply allowed into East Germany
Blockade lasted 11 months
West Berlin had become prosperous from the Marshall Plan
East Berlin had food and shelter, but were not prosperous- no supplies eg. appliances
Soviets took wealth from East Berlin while the West gave lots of money to West Berlin
East and West Germany were separated however since Berlin was surrounded by the whole of East Germany people could travel freely between East and West
The Wall was built because of constant comparisons between East and West Berlin
West Berlin economic boom
Skilled workers were paid high wages - many skilled workers living in the East illegally relocated to West Berlin
3M skilled workers went to the West
Walter Ulbricht warned Krushchev in July 1961 that it had to be stopped
Western countries were using West berlin as a way of spying on communist countries
Berlin represented the wider Cold War struggle - Krushchev wanted to make Berlin neutral however Kennedy refused
13 August 1961
50,000 East German Police with machine guns lined the border between East and West Berlin with barbed wire
followed the exact border of each zone
Permanent wall was build over the next few days with concrete slabs, searchlights, minefields, watch towers and machine gun posts
200 people died trying to cross the wall
Eastern Response
East Berlin - escapes and migration
East Berliners were trapped in East Berlin or those who had crossed the border over the weekend had been permanently separated
those who tried to escape were shot
Western Response
Middle of the night and weekend in Washington, French were on summer vacation
Quick decisions could not be made and Allies were powerless
Kennedy would not start a war over Berlin
Checkpoint Charlie
only border crossing for Westerners to enter East Berlin
Exchange point for spies
SUPER TENSE PART OF THE COLD WAR
snr american diplomat Allan Lightner was refused access to East Berlin to go to the theatre because he hadn’t shown his passport
American troops escorted him and his wife into East Berlin
Allied leaders decided to test the East Germans
Battle ready soldiers would escort US civillians into the East on meaningless excursions holding guns just to prove a point
Krushchev was not happy
sent 33 tanks into East Berlin
Brandenburg Gate
Checkpoint Charlie
Soviet tanks pointed cannons at the US tanks
everyone was on full alert
Commanders were concerned that an impulse decision would start real conflict
16 hours later the tension was broken when a soviet tank reversed 5 metres and began a withdrawal of all the tanks
Significant Outcomes of the Berlin Wall
Transformed the Cold war and became the primary symbol of Cold War tensions
Berlin became a principled issue in the war
both sides did not want to lose power in berlin
30 year policy called detente - where defined communist territory was tolerated by the US
uneasy calm on Europe- both sides knew they would never change their views
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
created with western countries to contain communism and protect countries under communist threat
Warsaw Pact
communism countries
created in response to NATO
significance of Cuba
145km from Miami/Florida
US had invested lots of money into Cuba
1959 - Anti Capitalist Fidel Castro led a revolution and took power by force
anti imperialist
turned to communism early 1960s
asked for financial assistance - US refused so Cuba made a deal with the USSR
The Bay of Pigs
aid was given to Castro’s enemies to invade Cuba and overthrow him
Bag of Pigs was a failure (April 1961)
US used ex-Cubans to invade Cuba, 1500 were killed or wounded
caused great embarrassment to Kennedy’s admin
Why the Bay of Pigs?
MAD - Mutually Assured Destruction
13 Days - Cuban Missile Crisis
October 13th 1962 - order airstrike on missile launch sites and invasion of the island
Cuba and USSR had made a deal
USSR was secretly transporting missiles to Cuba and building launch sites→ threat to US, wanted to counteract the threat from US missiles in Turkey and Italy
US only had a few options that would not be seen as an ‘act of war’
quarantined all packages to Cuba rather than blockading (intercept all shipments)
prevented further missiles being transported
US demanded missile removal - USSR insisted they were only defensive
US Spy plane shot down by Soviets
Soviet nuclear armed Submarine was signalled through a deep sea charge to signal it to come up
operators thought war had begun → too deep to communicate with surface
decision to launch nuclear torpedo had to be made unanimously, 2 commanders said yes 1 commander said no
nuclear torpedo not launched
US set to Def Con 2 - preparing for nuclear attack
Robert Kennedy (defence officer) secretly met with Anatoly Dobrynin (Russian ambassador)
intense negotiations
US would remove Turkey and Italy missiles, and promise to never invade Cuba
USSR would remove all missiles from Cuba under UN inspection
CRISIS AVERTED
admiration for diplomacy
even an impulse decision could have caused a nuclear attack
leaders of enemy countries were able to diplomatically avoid crisis
Domestic Response
CPA - Communist Party of Australia
Menzies wanted to outlaw CPA as he believed there was a threat to national security, peace and stability
Menzies targeted the CPA so that numbers declined steeply
Communist Party Dissolution Act 1950 was passed, however did not pass when taken to the high court as members of the public believed that it undermined democracy to ban a party
also set a precedent to allow the federal government to ban other parties
vote was won 50.56% to 49.44%- not to ban
Australians were very divided on the issue
Communism was feared in Australia
Australians thought that democracy was under threat
Communism was brought closer to Australian borders as much of Eastern Europe and Asia became communist countries
D - Domino Theory
if one country in South East Asia fell to communism, the other countries in the region would gradually fall
communism closer to our borders
A - Allies
Australia’s foreign policy was based on these main ideas
Australia needed to prove itself as a loyal ally - Australia supporting US and Britain in fight against communism
communism posed a threat to Australian security
ANZUS
Australia, NZ and US
September 1951
Military alliance
binds each of the nations through obligation to meet and discuss action to support each other in the event of an attack
Examples of Articles
Article III Parties consult each other whenever, in their opinion, the territorial integrity, political independence, or security of any of the Parties is threatened in the Pacific
Article IV armed attack in the Pacfic Area on any of the parties is dangerous to its own peace and safety
act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes
Guarantee? - no, as US is not in the Pacific
SEATO Alliance
US, UK, France, Australia, NZ, Pakistan, Thailand, Philippines
September 1954
United Anti-Communist states
fear of spread of communism
no longer exists
F - Forward Defence
Meeting threats to Australian security before they came too close
government commit troops to conflicts abroad to halt the spread of communism to prove Australia was a good ally (ANZUS, SEATO)
Justification: maintaining the gap between australia and communism, keeping communism within present boundaries (present at the time)
In practice, Australia became involved in
Korean War
Malaya Emergency
Vietnam War
T - Threat of Communism
Mostly perceived as Communist countries weren’t outwardly attacking other Non-Communist countries
referendum to ban Communist Party
Menzies used ASIO to watch and harass communists or people that were communist
ASIO- Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
Space Race & Arms Race
The Arms Race
nuclear arms were used as a deterrent
hydrogen bombs were 100x more powerful than nuclear bombs
INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE- ICBM
both sides started stockpiling nuclear weapons
turning point in the arms race
US responded by putting missile launch sites in NATO countries such as Turkey and Italy
Spy planes were used as surveillance to monitor use of ICBMs - both sides
MAD- Mutually Assured Destruction
The Space Race
1957 - Sputnik Satellite sent into space
series of one-upmanship between the US and USSR to send a person to space and eventually the moon
countries tried to battle each other for superiority
Space race was a race of ideological superiority between USA and USSR
Impact of the War on the US
CIA- Central Intelligence Agency
KGB- Russia
MI6- UK
the Cold War brings out intelligence agencies in the USSR and USA
1950s - Anti Communist Sentiment was on the rise
fear and scared within the US that communists had infiltrated the government
people were encouraged to dob in communists
espionage and spying was rife at this time
Aboriginal Rights in Australia prior to 1965
Universal Declaration of human rights
set of guidelines that recognise the dignity and equality of all people
Human rights include
free movement
freedom of choice
freedom of speech
freedom of expression (religion)
freedom of conscience
right to work
right to fair treatment under the law
right to education
right to healthcare
right to a nationality
no slavery
public hearing
seek asylum
Terra Nullius - land that belongs to nobody, unoccupied
Settlement- previously uninhabited place where people establish a community
Invasion - invading an occupied country with armed force
Protection - legal or formal measure intended to preserve civil liberties and rights
Self determination - process by which a person controls their own life
Assimilation- forcing a person to conform to the beliefs, rituals and culture of wider society \
paternalism- White saviourism
gov. tried to control the Aboriginal population through ‘parenting’ because they thought they needed protection
the practice by which the government or people of authority deal with Indigenous people the way a father does with a child
Europeans wanted to remove Indigenous people from the land
forced removal, massacres, disease and warfare
Aboriginal people fought to protect their right to the land
special cultural relationship with the land
policy applied using paternalism
imposed strict rules to control Aboriginal People
Established 1883
permission needed for movement
traditional celebrations and customs forbidden
protector controlled their money
permission required to marry, name children and send them to school
limited success in the 1850s with use of reserves
policy recognised Aboriginal relationship with the land- not taking into account tribal areas etc,
Indigenous people lived and worked independently on the reserves, and some retained customs and traditions
some reserve managers were cruel and used violence and intimidation against those living on the reserves
Established as ‘protection’ for the Aboriginal people
Christianise the Indigenous population
made to give up culture, language and spiritual belief
Aboriginal people were attracted to missions because of
food
chance to learn skills
education
home
safety from abuse by some white employers
those who managed the missions were sent by the church, however many Aboriginal people living on these missions did not receive enough food, were overworked and living conditions were poor
forces people to conform to attitudes, customs and beliefs of the majority
Aboriginals who were ‘half caste’ were absorbed into white society
segregation continued under assimilation
child endowment payments granted to families not living a nomadic lifestyle
eligible for old age and invalid pensions
certificate of exemption- step towards citizenship- if they cut off all ties to culture, family, traditions or Aboriginal lifestyle
children forcibly removed from families as part of protection and assimilation
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders with white parents/grandparents were absorbed into white society
A.O Neville wanted to ‘breed out’ the blackness of Aboriginal people
Assimilation meant different things to different people- some thought it means erasing Aboriginal people altogether, others thought it was breeding out their Blackness
de-tribalised- could be educated to a white standard
semi civilised- people who needed passive supervision from the government
uncivilised- people who could be preserved in reserves
Day of Mourning- 1938
Cummeragunja Walk off
Yirrkala Bark Petition
1938 Day of Mourning
26th January 1938
Jack Patten led the day of mourning
150 years after white invasion
demonstration at the arrival site of the first fleet
Jack Patten wrote a 10 point plan for Aboriginal Rights
William Cooper - Formed Australian Aborigines League
Margaret Tucker
Jack Patten + Will Ferguson - Aborigines Progressive Association
AAL+ APA Staged a day of mourning demonstration in Sydney
Cummeragunja Walk off - 1939
Kinchela Aboriginal Boys Home
Arthur McQuiggan - Manager
used intimidation and violence
Jack Patten - born at Cummeragunja
organised a strike
200 Aboriginal People left the reserve without permission
camped on the other side of the river which was under Victorian Jurisdiction
Yirrkala Bark Petition
1963 - Aus. Gov. sold part of Arnhem Land to a mining company
Yolgnu people - local inhabitants
Wangjuk Marika - wrote a petition to the Aus Gov signed by Yolngu elders
First legal document written by Aboriginal People to be recognised by the Australian Government
ultimately unsuccessful but still progress