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Ed: I was recently invited by to contribute up to 1800 words to a discussion topic, “What creeds should we hold in common?. Is being Australian a feature of your geographical location, your genealogy or your culture?”. This autobiographically-based essay was the result: My father John Charles Kevin was a fourth-generation Australian of middle class Irish Catholic stock, born in Forbes in 1909. Handsome and clever, he took a law degree in I thought he had spent his war at sea as an RAN lieutenant, but I later discovered that he had spent most of it helping set up My mother Minnie (Hermine) was Viennese Jewish, from a rich and cultured family. She and my grandmother and uncle were lucky to escape to
I floated uneasily between my father's and my mother's very different worlds. I was determined to learn no German, though I heard it at home all the time. I realise now that, though born here, I was in spirit one of John Hirst's immigrant kids (referring to his recent fine essay in Reflected Light). I envied the easy Australian-ness and simple happiness of life in I returned to Over the next two decades, my patriotism remained complacent and uncritical. The great socio-political challenges of the 1970s and 1980s passed me by. I never went to By the 1980s, slickness and dishonesty were creeping into Australian public culture. We were entering the world of “whatever it takes”, and the old simplicities and decencies of Anglo-Celtic Australia were starting to fray at the edges. I had some idea of the commercial and political sleaziness creeping into governance under Bob Hawke, but I thought that was just politics. I concentrated on my public service career and helping to bring up my two sons in The death of my beloved second wife Jennifer in 1989, from an unforeseen brain tumour, fractured a till-then-unruffled life. There followed a long grieving, shading into my postings as ambassador to In I began to think about issues of personal accountability for the deeds and complicities of one's own government. I began to look past the glossy Qantas image of My 30-year public service career ended in 1998, at age 55, and I began to explore the It was a very different place, especially after the 1996 Coalition victory, from the Our socio-economic elites were no longer standard-setters - they were no better or wiser, simply richer and more cynical. In our overgrown cities, the old suburban ideal of the good life had been tarnished. The public infrastructure of health and education and transport, so new and fresh in the confident 1960s, was already decaying. There weren't so many happy families around any more. There were fewer children. Too many of them were being neglected or abused in dysfunctional domestic set-ups where mothers or fathers or their new partners were putting themselves first and their kids' welfare and security a long way behind. People were drawing in on themselves, becoming more self-centred, reluctant to engage in community. The old churches were wilting, and new (and sometimes quite creepy) American-style happy-clappy groups were moving into the vacuum. And there was racism - not so much against Aborigines anymore, but against darker-skinned immigrants - Muslims or those who might look so. The cancer of the ever-worsening Israel-Palestinian conflict had spread to We had become a more militarised country, though our defence forces were more and more detached from our mainstream society in a professional military sub-culture that the rest of us did not quite connect with any more. We were routinely visiting terrible bureaucratic cruelties in our own country and offshore on boat people asylum-seekers. We were obviously now a complex multicultural society (I believe that as many as one in two Australians today was either born overseas, or has a partner or parent or parent-in-law born overseas), but not a particularly happy or well-integrated one. No one could seem to agree on what our national values were any more: we no longer could even find agreed meanings for words, there had been so much spin already that many of our most important words now had to be put in quotation marks when we used them. (Think about: “work choices”, “tolerance” , “mateship”, “fair go”, “national cohesion”, “national pride”, “national security”, “sovereignty”, “war on terror”, “integrity of our borders”, “security risk”, “conscience vote”, “moral issues”, “sustainable economic growth”, “processing”.) We couldn't agree on our own history any more. We seemed to be losing our sense of who we were, as our major media and national assets passed into foreign ownership and as we fell more and more into the American socio-cultural orbit. By 2006, our Australian nation was at more and more risk of becoming simply another large territorial appendage of the My Australian dream has finally shattered. I still love my country - more than ever - but I realise now that it has many serious and interconnected problems. Quite late in my life - I am now 63 - I realised the need to take up burdens of public involvement, working with other people of goodwill and integrity and knowledge, to try to help our country rebuild some of what it has lost in the past 60 years: trying to make this a better country; a country that does not make war on others; that does not scapegoat any of its own citizens; that behaves as a responsible and less selfish global citizen in the coming battle to save a decent human environment on this planet. There is a huge agenda now. The situation may seem hopeless but we have to make a start. I'll be spending the remaining years of my active life working on those things. Now I recognise that my rich multicultural family history and my present extended family including my grown-up sons, my sister's family, and my new Australian-Cambodian young family, are all gifts from God, giving me opportunities for a wider perspective on many of these issues. I realise now that Australian history has always been about growth, change, and disruption: settlers and displaced Indigenous people, ascendant Protestants and underclass Catholics, class conflicts, the post-1945 Anglo-Celtic ascendancy and the non-Anglo immigrants. There has always been prejudice and human hurt in our history, as well as warmth and generosity and decency and openness. Former senior Australian diplomat Tony Kevin (who served in DFAT and the Prime Minister's Department between 1968 and 1998, with his last postings at ambassador level in Poland and Cambodia), is the author of the prizewinning A Certain Maritime Incident – the Sinking of SIEV X ( Scribe Publications, Melbourne, 2004). He has a website www.tonykevin.com. He joined the ACT Branch of the Greens party earlier this year. He recently returned from a therapeutic long pilgrimage walk in ** This article evoked a spirited correspondence in the”OLO Forum” section of the On Line Opinion website , with over 40 comments . I responded in OLO Forum on 10 September: “I will respond, in a general way, to the interesting posts so far on my essay. Recall its origin – I was invited by OLO to comment on the September featured topic “What creeds should we hold in common?. Is being Australian a feature of your geographical location, your genealogy or your culture?”. That brief invited an honest autobiographical approach – subject to the discipline of less than 1800 words. - about the stages so far in my life as an Australian, and where I am going now. I'm glad some people appreciated the frankness. To those who thought I was being preachy, I assure you that I value Australian pluralism, our freedom to practice any religion or none at all. And I value our multiculturalism, also a red-rag word to some. On this, some correspondents just don't know Australian history – to look back to some sort of imagined golden age of a homogeneous culture here before the Muslim/ Asian/non-Angloceltic migrants started coming here - take your pick on where you want to draw your particular discriminatory line in the sand – is a misreading of our social history, which has always involved conflict and accomodation between groups in tension. On morality in politics, it seems to me that most politics these days – the issues that most matter – are moral issues: global warming, dealing with peak oil, surviving “work choices”, defending human rights under the contrived “War on Terror”, decent reception of asylum-seekers, are all moral issues, and they are all actually interlinked. The Politics of Fear (cf. Carmen Lawrence's important new book) are designed to to anaesthetise our consciences on these issues. We have to oppose that. People of goodwill can come together to work for a better (Part 2 of 2 parts) My admission that I worked fairly comfortably and without many qualms within the system for over 20 years, irritated some people. I don't deny that charge. I think however that my experience might be usefully indicative of the career experience of many people working within the governance system now –public servants, police, ADF personnel. One important thing I learned on my long walk in It won't be any news to anyone who reads my website that I regard John Howard as a traitor to real Australian values and to our sovereignty, a weak and frightened man, whose every day in Kirribilli House (because he won't live in the national capital) further damages Australia's political and ethical fabric. But Howard will pass, as Franco passed in http://www.tonykevin.com/JoinedGreens.htm . |
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