Ned K.
8 March
2016 is International Women's Day. This is an appropriate time to remember that
Aboriginal women workers were taking action on women workers' rights before the
emergence of the Suffragette movement in Australia in the 1890s and early years
of the 20th Century.
According
to research by Dianne Barwick in "Women's Role in Aboriginal
Society", in the 1870s Aboriginal women working on outback stations
developed a "genuine camaraderie" with white working class women on
the stations which was a "sadness to the Lord" of the stations who
saw it as their "Christian duty" to pay all the women as little as
possible. Barwick writes that in 1880 dormitory women at Coranderrk station (above) shocked the manager by conducting their own strike.
Barwick
quotes the manager as having written "For many weeks past elder girls have
positively refused to obey the Matron or work, saying that they would if paid
wages - they have prompted the orphan house boys to disregard my instructions
and encouraged them to rebel"!
Such strike action is not mentioned much now and few if any of these Aboriginal women feature in the top 100 lists of women in Australia's history. Anne McGrath's book "Aboriginal Women Workers in the Northern Territory" says that Aboriginal women workers performed a wider range of jobs than their European counterparts. They mustered cattle, accompanied camel teams, acted as shepherds, worked on road and fence building and in ochre mining. They also cared for animals and worked for saddlers and tanners. Much of this work was for low wages or no wages at all, just food, water and shelter of some basic description.
How far has capitalism in Australia progressed in recognising the leading role of Aboriginal women workers in development of outback Australia today? Recent government policies of both Labor and Liberal governments towards Aboriginal people suggest not very far. Every gain made on the workplace front has come from Aboriginal workers' struggles themselves. It is in this context that the Aboriginal women workers strike at Coranderrk station in 1880 is significant on International Women's Day 2016.
Such strike action is not mentioned much now and few if any of these Aboriginal women feature in the top 100 lists of women in Australia's history. Anne McGrath's book "Aboriginal Women Workers in the Northern Territory" says that Aboriginal women workers performed a wider range of jobs than their European counterparts. They mustered cattle, accompanied camel teams, acted as shepherds, worked on road and fence building and in ochre mining. They also cared for animals and worked for saddlers and tanners. Much of this work was for low wages or no wages at all, just food, water and shelter of some basic description.
How far has capitalism in Australia progressed in recognising the leading role of Aboriginal women workers in development of outback Australia today? Recent government policies of both Labor and Liberal governments towards Aboriginal people suggest not very far. Every gain made on the workplace front has come from Aboriginal workers' struggles themselves. It is in this context that the Aboriginal women workers strike at Coranderrk station in 1880 is significant on International Women's Day 2016.
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