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By Melissa Lucashenko
Fathers? Oh, where to begin. Not with my own father, who was raised
with a refugee's violence and loss, and passed some of it on. Let me
speak instead of some indigenous men I know — men of colour in a white
world. Black men, who, like me, are not just afraid that their sons
won't make it into the uni course of choice, but afraid also that our
sons may die grubby, violent deaths in police cells or parks.
'S' is from a coastal Northern NT community, raised in Darwin, lives in
Brisbane. He is light-skinned, has married a white woman and has a
blonde, blue-eyed son. He listens to his son, oh how he listens! Every
anecdote is theatrically reacted to. At three, this boy can tell a
story! Gestures, wide eyes, the lot. On the riverbank, 'S' wrestles his
boy in play as I and three very black grannies look on.
Conversationally, I speak of the violence in the Byron community, and
how I want to help change that. 'It's not terrible,' I explain. 'Not
like say in Tennant Creek or somewhere.' S pauses. As always, he speaks
softly but seriously. He is a law man, been through ceremony. No need
for loud noise or bluster. 'Even a little bit — that's too much,' he
says. Pinches finger and thumb together. 'Even that much. It's too
much. Any amount.' He is suggesting a very different universe.
'B' is from North Queensland. I hear him ask his five year old, 'Do you
like being an Aboriginal boy?' and listening carefully to the answer. I
have asked another Aboriginal man, a mutual friend, to be an uncle to
my own boy, whose father is white. When puberty hits, my partner can do
some of the work for our son, but not all of it. He needs black men
too. Unasked, 'B' says to me in the same fashion as 'S', quiet, serious
but not pious, 'He can call me Uncle.' Unasked, mind you. These black
men have broad shoulders.
Another man, also from Queensland. Hurting. In a public mall in an
Australian capital city, he is told by police to move on. 'I can't, I'm
meeting my ex here with my kids,' he protests. 'We don't care,' the
coppers reply. 'You can't be around here any longer than two minutes.'
He is forced to leave, to stand up his kids.
There is a mythic Aboriginal man in the white Australian psyche —
drunken, violent, raging, dangerous. I know one or two such black men,
but I know a lot more like 'S', and like 'B'. Black men who know our
kids are precious, and act like it. Whitefellas have a lot to learn
from them, but will have to shed their ingrained racism to do so.
That's part of being an Australian father too.
Melissa Lucahsenko is an indigenous novelist who is optimistic about our children's future.
Published in byronchild/Kindred, issue 11, September 04
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