Views from Western Australia

August 22, 2008

A letter to political leaders before West Australian election 2008

Filed under: Aboriginal Affairs

Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation (WA) and the Bringing Them Home Committee WA take this opportunity to write jointly to urge your party to adopt a policy to provide core funding for the establishment of a community based “Reconciliation secretariat” in Western Australia that would be a catalyst for major reconciliation initiatives here and would also act as a Western Australian arm of Reconciliation Australia, which is an independent, not for profit, national peak body.
Why this and why now?
1.      Leadership.  While there are a number of reconciliation events at a local community level and in various organisations across the state, there is a real vacuum in promoting reconciliation at a state wide level.  This sort of catalyst is fundamental to driving the momentum for a broadly based reconciliation movement.  It is critical that there is a centralized body that can promote reconciliation events, provide resources and training.
2.      Now is the time. A window has opened for Indigenous people and the wider community to move forward together. The National Apology has opened up possibilities for healing action and community mobilisation that we have not seen in this state for a long time.
3.      The networks are in place. ANTaR and BTH are both voluntary organisations who struggle to meet the growing requests from a range of people and organisations.  Being community based organisations, they are very much in touch with the needs as they emerge. This proposal leverages on those networks.
4.      The business community has shown the way. The minerals industry generally is making significant inputs to Indigenous communities through employment practises, which is their sphere. They are sharing their very considerable income from lands which were, since time immemorial, cared for and inhabited by Indigenous peoples. The State Government can match that intent in its own sphere.
5.      There has been a major commitment by the Commonwealth and COAG to closing the gap in relation to Aboriginal life expectancy.  Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people can work shoulder to shoulder to ‘close the gap’. We need this office to build dialogue and action around the questions: What is Aboriginal work in closing the gap? What is non-Aboriginal work in closing the gap? What is shared work in closing the gap?  WA needs a community-based organisation with credibility that can operate across a range of community networks.  WA needs an organisation with a State-wide focus on reconciliation initiatives and priorities. 
6.      This would not be a new budget item. In their budget, the Department of Indigenous Affairs has been allocated $100 thousand p.a. to a reconciliation small grants scheme.  The Bringing Them Home committee is now commencing a small grants reconciliation scheme that will be funded by Lotterywest. In our view this frees the DIA money for an alternative reconciliation project in the area of greatest emerging need. While this is a relatively small allocation, it has the potential to be a base core funding.
7.      This proposal builds upon success. Sorry Days are growing in number around the state and in numbers in attendance.  ‘Yarning Circles’ for Stolen Generation members are attracting numbers between eight and sixty.  After the success of Reconciliation Action Plans in State and Federal Government Departments, there is scope for expanding the scheme to many church and community organisations. The major churches all crafted reconciliation strategies at the urging of Australians for Reconciliation’s WA office in the late 1990s which can be re-energised. These are concrete indicators of a new desire for Reconciliation in the general community.
8.      We understand that most other states have a centralized reconciliation body.  We believe that Western Australia’s lack of financial support for such a body is short sighted; it undervalues the social capital of the goodwill that exists in business, community organisations, the Indigenous network and the wider community. 
This letter seeks in principle agreement in the form of published written pre-election promise. Reconciliation WA would be a small secretariat which leveraged sound networks to harness considerable recent goodwill in a window of opportunity. It needs reliable funding to be established as a community hub, strong on communications and a significant contact point nationally.

August 8, 2008

Willie Nelson/Wynton Marsalis

Filed under: Music Reviews

Two Men With The Blues 

A country harmonica solo followed impeccably by a jazzy sax solo! Huh? Miles Davis once said he enjoyed listening to Willie Nelson because he had a jazz sense to his music. Nelson has always had jazz nuances in his vocal style and his off-the-beat phrasing. He is also an underrated guitarist who uses chords more common to jazz than country. This meeting of two of the most important musicians in contemporary country and jazz - Willie Nelson & Wynton Marsalis - who reveal their common love of the blues. The choice of backing musicians is great, with Mickey Raphael on harmonica from Nelson’s band and the Marsalis crew. Walter Blanding on sax is terrific and is given room to play. Dan Nimmer is in excellent form on piano and he carries the album along. Nelson has recorded "Night Life" countless times already, but the growling Marsalis trumpet solo reinforces the anguish of the lyrics. Nimmer’s piano accompaniment with Raphael’s superbly understated harmonica solo in "Georgia On My Mind" is magnificent. "Basin Street Blues" and "Rainy Day Blues" gets the Marsalis crew into a familiar groove, with latter featuring Blanding and Raphael playing off each other and Nelson’s unique guitar. "My Bucket’s Got A Hole In It" is performed as a Dixieland swing number with free playing by everyone; Ali Jackson contributes an attention-grabbing drum solo with Marsalis adding a lyric. "That’s All" has everybody contributing their all which results in some sizzling playing. The version of Billie Holiday’s "Ain’t Nobody’s Business", is looser with Nelson and Marsalis both soloing along with Blanding on sax and bass player Carlos Henriquez having a crack. Nelson, from Texas, and Marsalis, from Louisiana - have no problems finding common ground. Both men love the blues, and love to play it; this meeting of master musicians is special and it all sounds like great fun. This is a fascinating blend of country jazz and blues. If anything, this album demonstrates the common roots of all three traditions.

Released July 2008

Blue Note Records 

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