‘I want to change my people’: Yothu Yindi support Australia Day on January 26

One of the band’s founders said he does not support protests on the national holiday or changing the date.

Witiyana Marika

Witiyana Marika, a Rirratjingu leader and founder of the Indigenous music group Yothu Yindi. Source: NITV

Yothu Yindi have called for “unity” as debate about the most appropriate date to celebrate Australia Day has reignited.

The Arnhem Land band will be performing as part of official festivities organised by the NSW state government.

The Indigenous music group are famous for their 1991 protest anthem Treaty, the first song to hit the mainstream music market in any Aboriginal Australian language.

Witiyana Marika, Yothu Yindi co-founder, said it was a “privilege” to be a part of the January 26 program.

“We want to celebrate unity and redemption,” he told NITV.

“For me, I’d like to celebrate ‘cause of my survival… I’ve got my black power culture that I still carry on.”

The NSW state government announced that its January 26 program will be based on the theme ‘Everyone, every story’ in an effort to bring people together.

Events will begin at sunrise with an Indigenous ceremony at Barangaroo Reserve and raising the Aboriginal and Australian flags on Sydney Harbour Bridge.

A street party will be held in The Rocks and ships and ferries will take to the harbour as part of the annual Ferrython.

In the evening, Yothu Yindi and The Treaty Project will perform at Campbell’s Cove while singer Kate Ceberano will take to the stage in front of the Opera House.

NSW Multiculturalism Minister, Ray Williams, said it would be a “great day” and dismissed suggestions that it would not be a day to celebrate for everyone.

“I think most people are happy to celebrate Australia Day on this particular date,” he said.

“I don’t think they want to get too political about it, they just want to celebrate everything that’s great about it.”

New polling commissioned by conservative think-tank, the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) showed .

It also said just 10 per cent of 1000 people surveyed want to change the date of the national day.

Bella d'Abrera, a spokeswoman for the IPA, was not surprised by the results.

“It reflects exactly what the poll came up with last year,” she told SBS.

“It shows that the more that anti-Australia Day groups push, the more young Australians and all Australians want to keep Australia Day on the 26th of January.”

Many First Nations people refer to January 26 as Invasion Day or Survival Day.

But Marika does not support changing the date or protests on the national holiday.

“I want to change my people to lean forward instead of fighting,” he said.

“Unity and redemption, to reconcile each other, yeah, to live together in harmony. That’s my dream, that’s my hope.”


Share
Published 16 January 2019 9:26pm
By Greg Dunlop
Source: NITV News


Share this with family and friends


Featured Live Channels

Subscribe to the NITV Newsletter

Receive the latest Indigenous news, sport, entertainment and more in your email inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Interviews and feature reports from NITV.
A mob-made podcast about all things Blak life.
Get the latest with our nitv podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on NITV
The Point: Referendum Road Trip

The Point: Referendum Road Trip

Live weekly on Tuesday at 7.30pm
Join Narelda Jacobs and John Paul Janke to get unique Indigenous perspectives and cutting-edge analysis on the road to the referendum.
#ThePoint