The 'Father of Reconciliation' has hung up his hat and retired from Australian politics

In 2016 Pat Dodson joined the Senate representing his home state of Western Australia, boasting an already impressive career advocating for justice and self-determination.

DEB HAALAND AUSTRALIA VISIT

Labor senator and Yawuru man Pat Dodson at a smoking ceremonyat Parliament House in Canberra. Source: Supplied / Mick Tsikas/AAP Image

When Senator Pat Dodson hangs up his hat, with its familiar band showing the colours of the Aboriginal flag, he'll be calling time on an extraordinary career that began in the priesthood.

Retiring on Friday after more than seven years in the upper house, Labor Senator Dodson, 75, has been referred to as 'the father of reconciliation' in recognition of his work to advance the justice for First Nations people.
This came despite an early life touched by fear and tragedy, as the Yawuru Elder who was born in Broome spoke about in his maiden speech to the Senate in 2016.

"I was born before the constitutional changes of 1967," he said in the speech, referring to the successful referendum to have Aboriginal people counted in the population.

"I was hiding in the long grass in the Northern Territory town of Katherine and watched my age-mates being taken by welfare and police."
PAT DODSON RETIREMENT PRESSER
Labor Senator and Yawuru man Pat Dodson has formally retired from Australian politics. Source: AAP / Lukas Coch/AAP Image
While the young Pat Dodson and his siblings avoided becoming members of the Stolen Generation, their parents died in 1960 and Pat, brother Mick and two of their siblings were made wards of the state.

In 1975, Senator Dodson became the first Aboriginal person to be ordained as a Catholic priest.

But a few years later he left the priesthood, finding it difficult to reconcile his Yawuru spirituality with some aspects of Catholicism.

He later worked as a commissioner on the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody and had spells as Director on the Kimberley and Central land councils.

Senator Dodson later said that being a royal commissioner had crystallised his understanding of the importance of self-determination and giving a voice to the seemingly voiceless.
He chaired the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation from 1991 to 1997 and co-chaired the Expert Panel for Constitutional Recognition of Indigenous Australians from 2010 to 2016 before joining the Senate.

In 2023 Senator Dodson was diagnosed with cancer, meaning he played a lesser role than he'd hoped in the unsuccessful voice referendum campaign.

During his farewell speech to the Senate in November, Senator Dodson handed the message stick for reconciliation to the next generation. He reiterated words from his maiden speech about the deep shared spirituality that has nourished his people for thousands of years.

"My people, the Yawuru people, have a formula about reconciliation, without having known what reconciliation was," he said.

"Mabu ngarrungunil, a strong community where people matter and are valued; mabu buru, a strong place, a good country where use of resources is balanced, and sacredness is embedded in the landscape; and, finally, mabu liyan, a healthy spirit, a good state of being for individuals, families and community, whose essence arises from our encounter with the land and people."

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3 min read
Published 26 January 2024 2:09pm
Source: AAP


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