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'One and Free': prominent Australian lawmaker urges change to national anthem

by Reuters
Wednesday, 11 November 2020 05:27 GMT

A demonstrator holds an Australian Aboriginal flag during a protest against police brutality and the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter protests in the United States, in Sydney, Australia, June 12, 2020. REUTERS/Loren Elliott

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The national anthem should change the line 'we are young and free' to 'we are one and free' to recognise that Indigenous Australians are the oldest continued civilization in the world

By Renju Jose

SYDNEY, Nov 11 (Reuters) - Australia should change the lyrics of its national anthem to honour its indigenous people, the leader of the country's most populous state said on Wednesday, becoming one of the most prominent lawmakers to endorse such an alteration.

Australia's national anthem includes the line "we are young and free". But New South Wales state Premier Gladys Berejiklian said this should be changed to "we are one and free" as it fails to recognise that indigenous Australians are the oldest continued civilization in the world.

"I think it's about time we recognise the tens of thousands of years of the first nations people of this continent," Berejiklian told the Australian Broadcasting Corp television. "We're tens of thousands of years old when it comes to human inhabitants. It's just a small gesture."

Each year Australians have a national holiday on Jan. 26, marking the date the "First Fleet" sailed into Sydney Harbour in 1788, carrying mainly convicts and troops from Britain. Some indigenous people refer to Australia Day as "Invasion Day".

Australia has struggled for decades to reconcile with Aborigines, who arrived on the continent some 50,000 years before British colonists, but the country has seen a renewed focus on Indigenous empowerment amid the Black Lives Matter movement.

Indigenous Australians, about 700,000 people in a population of nearly 26 million, have tracked near the bottom in almost every economic and social indicator.

"Whether we can become 'one' will depend on whether symbolic changes to the anthem are accompanied by practical change at the national level," said Anne Dennis, chairwoman of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.

(Reporting by Renju Jose and Colin Packham. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

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