Sorry Day is about empathy

OPINION: On this National Day of Healing, let’s recognise that starting point of 'sorry'. Empathy is a virtue vital for Australians to reach reconciliation, writes Luke Briscoe.

An Indigenous Australian woman cries in federal parliament as she listens to former prime minister Kevin Rudd deliver an apology to the Stolen Generations.

An Indigenous Australian woman cries in federal parliament as she listens to former prime minister Kevin Rudd deliver an apology to the Stolen Generations. Source: AAP

Unless you were a complete angel as a child, all of us have memories of being told to apologise to someone at some point.

But sometimes, saying 'sorry' just wasn’t enough. I realised this one day when I looked a schoolmate straight in the eye, internalising how he felt to the point where I had tears in my own eyes. This is called empathy: the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.

As children, empathy is taught, encouraged, even enforced. But as adults, for some reason it can have a tendency to fall by the wayside.

In politics, policy and legislation, a lack of empathy in our leaders can have devastating impacts. It's clear from a daily rhetoric that the prevalent political culture is hardly conducive to fostering empathy.
But days like National Day of Healing can serve as reminders that empathy is at the heart of all of our great steps towards reconciliation.
But days like today —National Sorry Day— can serve as reminders that empathy is at the heart of all of our great steps towards reconciliation.

In 1998, the Howard Government declared May 26 —the anniversary of the Bringing Them Home report, published in 1997 by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission— to be National Sorry Day. In 2005, it was renamed the 'National Day of Healing', with Senator Aden Ridgeway saying on behalf of the National Sorry Day Committee that "the Day will focus on the healing needed throughout Australian society if we are to achieve reconciliation".

Former Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice commissioner Tom Calma agreed that this day should be about looking towards reconciliation.

"Reconciliation concerns both Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians —we are bound to each other’s fate. In order to achieve reconciliation we must heal together— reconciliation is everyone’s responsibility," he said in 2005.
In order to achieve reconciliation we must heal together —reconciliation is everyone's responsibility,
Indeed, it was a momentous occasion and a big step forward.

And at the heart of saying the word ‘sorry’ was the acknowledgment —the empathy— for the mistreatment of Australia’s Aboriginal peoples.

The 1967 Referendum showed the world that the great population of Australia could empathise with Aboriginal people when an overwhelming majority voted 'Yes' to recognising Aboriginal Australians in the Constitution. This was an act of solidarity shown towards Indigenous Australians that was never experienced before. The event would mark a significant milestone for the nation, enabling discussion and debates that would eventually lead us to various reconciliation achievements for years to come.

But perhaps there has been no greater act by a national leader, more profoundly passionate and honest, than Prime Minister Paul Keating's . Paul Keating's speech on Aboriginal reconciliation did not shy away from the issues faced by Indigenous Australians and the effects of having their homelands being taken and children removed from families. His speech is considered by many to be one of the best speeches ever given by an Australian. And at its core, was empathy. That is where it derives its potency.

In 2008, former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made the . If 'sorry' is a symbol of empathy, then this act was up there with Paul Keating's Redfern speech.
For many Indigenous Australians, saying 'sorry' can lack meaning, as Indigenous people were never compensated for crimes against them.
Sorry Day means many different things too different people. For many Indigenous Australians, saying 'sorry' can lack meaning, as Indigenous people were never compensated for crimes against them.

This is absolutely valid. After all, actions speak louder than words. 

But it's worth recognising that the starting point of 'sorry' is empathy. And without empathy reconciliation will remain remote.

 

Luke Briscoe is a digital producer and Indigenous science educator. Follow Luke  

National Sorry Day (26 May) acknowledges and recognises members of the Stolen Generations. For more information, visit .  


Share
4 min read
Published 26 May 2015 1:36pm
Updated 25 May 2018 12:39pm
By Luke Briscoe
Source: NITV News


Share this with family and friends