It was almost three years ago that Scott Morrison delivered one of his one-liners. The then prime minister thought it was “pretty ordinary” that Cricket Australia had dropped references to “Australia Day” in Big Bash League promotional material leading up to the public holiday. The day, considered by some as a day of mourning and increasingly referred to as Invasion Day by many First Nations people and others, would instead be referred to only as “January 26”.

In response, Morrison claimed the date in 1788 “wasn’t a particularly flash day for the people on those [first fleet] vessels either”. Among those angered by the remarks was Cathy Freeman, who tweeted that the experiences of those early settlers were incomparable with “what their arrival meant for all generations of Australia’s First Nations people”.

That was January 2021. It is now January 2024. Australia has a different prime minister, and Anthony Albanese possesses views so dissimilar to his predecessor that he attempted to give Indigenous Australians a Voice to Parliament via the unsuccessful 2023 referendum. Even Twitter is called something different now, and yet the views on both sides of the issue being spat back and forth on the platform now known as X remain as full of outrage as they were three years prior.

CA’s stance, which created headlines again on Monday, is not new. Last year, the women’s national team played a T20 match against Pakistan. The year before, there were BBL games. The year before that, the same. “Australia Day” was not referenced for any of these fixtures. The only difference is this is the first time during this period that a men’s Test will fall on January 26, which coincides with day two of Australia’s second Test against the West Indies – the result of a packed calendar.

CA, which says it consulted its Indigenous advisory board (NATSICAC) on the issue, will conduct a standard Welcome to Country ceremony on day one at the Gabba, this Thursday. On Friday, Australia Day will be marked in passing by a ground announcer. Still, CA and Tennis Australia, which will avoid celebrating Australia Day for a second consecutive year, have been accused of “wokeism”.

NSW Premier Chris Minns on Monday urged both sporting bodies to “revisit the decision”.

Ashleigh Gardner believes cricket should not be played on January 26.Credit: Getty Images

“The idea that you would take a national day away from any country, particularly Australia, is a strange one,” Minns told 2GB. “We should, right now, [be] trying to pull each other together, and this is the day that we’ve set aside to celebrate what it means to live in the greatest country on Earth.”

Indigenous all-rounder Ashleigh Gardner has thoughts about what it means to live in the greatest country on earth. In January 2023, she said being told she would be playing against Pakistan on January 26 “doesn’t sit well with me as an individual but also all the people I’m representing”. In May, she felt uncomfortable once more when the men’s Test was slated for this year.

QOSHE - Test on Australia Day highlights the toxic divide splitting the country - Emma Kemp
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Test on Australia Day highlights the toxic divide splitting the country

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22.01.2024

It was almost three years ago that Scott Morrison delivered one of his one-liners. The then prime minister thought it was “pretty ordinary” that Cricket Australia had dropped references to “Australia Day” in Big Bash League promotional material leading up to the public holiday. The day, considered by some as a day of mourning and increasingly referred to as Invasion Day by many First Nations people and others, would instead be referred to only as “January 26”.

In response, Morrison claimed the date in 1788 “wasn’t a particularly flash day for the people on those [first fleet] vessels either”. Among those angered by the remarks was Cathy Freeman, who tweeted that the experiences of those early settlers were incomparable with “what their arrival meant........

© The Sydney Morning Herald


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