‘Harmony Day’ sweeps racism under the carpet again!

March 21 has been celebrated by Australia as Harmony Day since 1999. No other country does this. Instead, starting in 1979, every other nation observes that day as the ‘UN International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination’.

Our aberrant practice attracts international derision, a recent example being the ‘Australian Newsletter’ in the New York Times of March 19, 2021, in which reporter Yan Zhuang highlighted our curious custom in an article headlined ‘The Strange History of Harmony Day and Australia’s Racism Discussion’.  “For some”, he wrote, “The best way to tackle racism is to not mention it and instead use “more encouraging words.”

Zhuang is uncannily accurate in concluding that the underlying reason for choosing ‘Harmony’ was that it sounded ‘more encouraging’ than any phrase highlighting ‘racism’ even one calling for its elimination. Unfortunately the world is very far from eliminating racism, and Australia is among the biggest laggards on this journey. The focus on Harmony, with all its which has made the day one that is full of feel-good celebrations of the wonderful diversity of language, culture, dance, songs, dress and food, unfortunately ignores the elephant in the room, Racism!

Choosing an ‘encouraging’ name was unquestionably what drove Immigration Minister, Philip Ruddock, whose was very keen on placating John Howard, who notoriously struggled with even using the ‘R’ word, notoriously dismissing the reality that it was the cause of the Cronulla riots, saying, “I do not accept there is underlying racism in this country”. Howard preferred to ‘accentuate the positive’ even if this meant ‘eliminating (effectively, denying) the negative’. Harmony Day pandered to his denialism perfectly.

Strangely, this decision wasn’t endorsed by the National Multicultural Advisory Council, which was appointed by the Minister and which I was honoured to chair. Our report, ‘Australian Multiculturalism for a New Century: Towards Inclusiveness’, which the PM launched only a month later, doesn’t mention, Harmony Day! When I asked Ruddock why we downplayed the UN observance, he responded with words to the effect that “We focus on both Harmony and the Elimination of Racism”! My discomfort with this equivocation was among several disagreements I had with Howard and Ruddock, which culminated in my resignation in January 2002 as Chair of both the Multicultural and Business (Migration) Advisory Councils.

Denial whitewashes our historic and ongoing racism, our Original Sin, which began with the invasion of January 26, 1788 and continues to stain our individual and collective souls. It is at the root of our Government’s disgraceful response to the ‘Uluru Statement from the Heart’, the heartfelt and magnanimous plea by our Sovereign First Nations for ‘Voice Treaty Truth’ through a Makaratta dialogue.

Also, while we have discarded our other racist heritage, the ‘White Australia Policy’, we still apply it to Asylum Seekers. Indigenous leader Lowitja O’Donoghue had them in mind when she asked in 2003, “How is it that the nation’s First Peoples and its last peoples should suffer similar indignity?” Nothing has changed!

We must also take an honest look at the racism and xenophobia we have towards our fellow migrants who are ‘different’. Yes, Australian Multiculturalism has been an amazing success and the transformation of White Australia to Multicultural Australia in less than 50 years rightly makes us collectively proud. But, again, we migrants are not free from prejudice towards others of migrant stock, but from a different race, ethnic or linguistic group, religion or national origin from us. We have a fair share of xenophobia, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism and colour prejudice towards non-Whites and Whites, which erodes national harmony.

Honesty demands acknowledgement that racism isn’t restricted to Australians of British and Irish stock. Those of us originating elsewhere should ask ourselves if we tend to be overly critical of our majority community and too readily brand it racist. We need to remind ourselves how soon and how well, our host communities have accepted the massive change in Australia’s multicultural mix. Credit for this must largely be given to both Indigenous Australians and to those of British/Irish heritage.

Yes, we newcomers have put in the hard yards and deserve credit for our achievements, which have resulted in numerous first and second generation migrants now holding positions at or near the top of the ladder, as employees or entrepreneurs, in public and private service and in virtually every profession, whether academia, sport, medicine, the law, the media and even politics. But we must acknowledge and admire the good grace and good humour with which ‘dinky-di’ Aussies have responded to our phenomenal success and the radical change, both positive and negative, they have had to adapt to. The record number of mixed marriages is also tribute to their (and our) collective intercultural comfort.

It would pay us to imagine how our countries of origin might have reacted with anything approaching the racial and cultural diversification in Australia. How would my country of origin, India, itself a highly diverse and largely peaceful nation, have reacted if a similar percentage of racially different migrants, e.g. Europeans, Africans, East Asians – literally a hundred million or more – arrived there in just 50 years. An honest answer should help us acknowledge and admire the good grace and good humour with which ‘dinky-di’ Aussies have responded to such radical change.

I do not suggest that ‘Harmony Day’ be discontinued. It rightly celebrates the success of Australian Multiculturalism. We just need to move it well away from March 21, when we focus totally on the Elimination of Racism.  Finding an alternative should not be difficult. We could choose from several celebratory days in the  United Nations calendar, including:

  1. 21 May: World Day for Cultural Diversity
  2. July 30: International Day of Friendship
  3. December 18: International Migrants Day. This date could be tweaked to the last day of the school year, a wonderful celebratory note ahead of the holiday season!

Alternatively, as Harmony Day is our own creation, we could choose our own date, one that the business and school calendar can comfortably accommodate.

Comments

6 responses to “‘Harmony Day’ sweeps racism under the carpet again!”

  1. charles Avatar
    charles

    Just exactly what is it which seems to prevent us from owning Howard’s career-long and continuing exploitation and manipulation of anti-human rights policy for what it still is?

    Is it opportunism + hope on the Opposition’s part? Is it the lack of “courageous” Leadership of the Opposition? Is it the lack of philosophic talent (not to mention credibility) on the part of the Greens?

    Is anyone willing to attempt some sort of answer?

  2. Chek Ling Avatar
    Chek Ling

    It would be better if we eliminate Harmony Day. Hypocrisy cleansed.
    It is a fig leaf.
    The “attitude behaviour inconsistency” is for all who care to see.
    After 50 years of multiculturalism, the Chinese are still scapegoats every time white Australia feels a sense of existential fragility.

    Same phenomenon with the Welcome to Country and ” Respect for their of Elders, past , present and emerging” rubbish. All cheap lollies handed out by white masters of the realm, but with solid food denied to the Aboriginal people where needed.

    1. Man Lee Avatar
      Man Lee

      Chek Ling,
      Totally agree with points you made. Just scrap the freaking hypocrisy. Let all the Eric Abetzs or Duttons of Australia come out with all their ugly racist statements, so the world can see what low lifes they are.

      BTW, there was a UN General Assembly vote taken at the end of last year: “A global call for concrete action for the elimination of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance”.

      https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/3896183?ln=en

      There was a huge majority, some abstentions, and 14 Countries which voted AGAINST. Listed below.

      Go figure! My suspicion is that like many UN General Assembly votes, many Western countries defer their decision to Israel – because the State of Israel hates world attention to its crimes against the Palestinians. When ISRAEL says jump, Australia will say, “how high”!

      AUSTRALIA
      CANADA
      CZECHIA
      DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
      FRANCE
      GERMANY
      GUYANA
      ISRAEL
      MARSHALL ISLANDS
      NAURU
      NETHERLANDS
      SLOVENIA
      UNITED KINGDOM
      UNITED STATES

  3. Dr Ka Sing Chua Avatar
    Dr Ka Sing Chua

    Good to hear from you again Neville Roach. I remembered when Sir Ninien Stephen launching “AUSTRALIAN CITIZENSHIP FOR A NEW CENTURY” report in February 2000, he stressed the importance of educating all Australians how to be a good multicultural Australian citizens. We have done well in educating Australians since then. But more can still be done in keeping with changing circumstances. We cannot be complacent especially with our Australian leadership including our Ministers from Prime Minister down to States and Territory in educating and promoting how not to forget to behave like a good multicultural Australian citizen always and not just paying lip services. “We focus on both Harmony and the Elimination of Racism”! I agree action speaks louder than voice.

    1. Teow Loon Ti Avatar
      Teow Loon Ti

      Mr Roach,
      John Howard and the erstwhile Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are so alike in their thinking that they could be identical twins. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad famously said, “There are no gays in Iran.”
      Sincerely,
      Teow Loon Ti

    2. Teow Loon Ti Avatar
      Teow Loon Ti

      Dr Chua, sorry, the following comment was meant for Mr Roach. I made a mistake.