By Timothy Bottoms, November 2023

Three months after Cairns was established, the Queenslander in 1877 published an article by Old Chum about the Native Police and their ‘dispersing’ of Indigenous people. Quite readily this reporter relates how the Native Police answered the question :
Do we shoot them? Of course we do. The popular idea is to disperse them by firing over their heads. Bah! only people who know nothing about wild myalls would imagine that they would be afraid of that sort of thing. One thing is certain. If you point a gun at a nigger (sic) to frighten him you had better let him have it straight, or you are very likely to find a spear sticking in your back as soon as soon as you turn away.
Queenslander (27 January 1877)
This practice was observed, not, as Old Chum states before 1877, but as long as the Queensland Native Police existed (1859- c.1910). That is why the Danish editor, Carl Feiberg1 after editing the Cooktown Courier went on to edit the Queenslander and in 1880 produced The Way We Civilise which unfortunately confirms what Old Chum openly declared.  Yet the Native Police had been operating for 17 years (1842-59) as a part of the NSW government, before the establishment of the colony of Queensland in 1859, and continued under the Queensland government until approximately 1910. Henry Reynolds observed:
Harsh racist views were obviously convenient to a community engaged in dispossessing a native people and perhaps some such doctrine was psychologically necessary to the pioneer or to those aware of conditions on the frontier of settlement.2
No matter how you look at it, to the Indigenous people of Australia the arrival of Europeans was an invasion of their traditional lands. James Cook claimed the eastern side of the New Holland at Possession Island in the Torres Strait in 1770, but nobody informed Aboriginal Australia! Eighteen years later the actual act of possessing the land started after Governor Arthur Phillip and the First Fleet arrived in Botany Bay, on 27 January 1788. The diversity of languages spoken by Indigenous tribal groups meant that most Europeans had only a rudimentary (if that) knowledge of the nature of people whose lands they were invading. So their interpretation of Indigenous people was purely on supposition, based on what Europeans thought they were thinking. Similarly, the more gory aspects of the Bama’s (rainforest Aboriginal peoples) mortuary practices were amplified and utilized to denigrate them. This was particularly noticeable with regard to cannibalism.3

William Kracke, who arrived on the Palmer Goldfields in 1882 as a would-be miner, and lived in the area for the next 22 years, stated that:

The North Queensland blacks, or better called Myalls, are acknowledged to be  the lowest class of human beings under the sun, nothing can be lower than they are – in fact, lower than most animals. They are cannibals of the worst type.4
This detrimental view of far northern rainforest Aborigines was certainly prevalent among miners and the general European community. It bespeaks the fear with which the invaders held indigenous people. The historian, Geoffrey Bolton, felt that there:
is some indication that cannibalism was rare before the coming of the white man, who, however, was ready to credit the Aborigines with man-eating and soon found proofs which appeared to carry conviction.5

In the light of Rainforest Aborigines mortuary practices, Bolton’s interpretation seems quite apt. Nevertheless there appears to have been a form of non-gustatorial cannibalism, which when it did occur, involved the eating of a tiny portions of thigh and kidneys. Typically the portion was very small and enable the deceased to share a part of his spirit and knowledge (as a medicine-man or well-known warrior).6 The evidence is too contradictory to be very precise. Generally, it would appear that misunderstandings of Bama mortuary practices gave Europeans the impression that cannibalism was rife, when it likely was not. To what degree Europeans were capable of distinguishing between supposed human remains, preserved mummies or parts thereof, and local animals, such as the cassowary, merely adds to the uncertainty of the debate. In this regard European’s had trouble in distinguishing between a Cassowary thigh bone and a human femur.

The Governor, in his reply to the Secretary of State for Colonies in August 1875, described the Aborigines of the North as ‘numerous, savage, treacherous, and very commonly cannibals’ – a conclusion that was readily supported by the violent culture contact apparent by that time on the Palmer mining frontier.7 However, there is no evidence for being ‘very commonly cannibals’ – although we know that food resource’s were scarce on the Palmer as Mulligan noted that “fish will not bite at all this moon, and the birds are scarce and hard to kill…”8 and that this might have ostensibly led to cannibalism. But again, there is no proof that this was the case, and nobody is taking into account Aboriginal culture and religious beliefs which would be aghast at eating people. But we don’t know whether with scarce resources on the Palmer, that there might have some Indigenous people who might have resorted to eating people, however, we don’t have any primary sources that reflects this.

Archaeologist’s interpretations of how long Aboriginal people have occupied the  Australian continent, varies between 65,000 and maybe as long as 120,000 BP.9 Settler’s in the 19th century considered that Aboriginal people had been here for a couple of hundred years when in fact they are the oldest living culture in the world.

In 2017, The National Geographic Magazine, wrote: “when Columbus came back [to America], the indigenous people who had previously been classified as friendly were suddenly described as cannibals, so you could do anything to them. You could enslave them, take their land, murder them, and treat them like pestilence. And that’s exactly what happened, … The idea of cannibalism as a taboo was used to de-humanize the people encountered on these conquests.”10 In a similar vein the after effects of and continuing detrimental diseases of cannibalism led to degenerative brain disorders, such as kuru and mad cow disease, which were nearly always fatal. If this had been practised over 65,000 years there would have been clues to it in their DNA and would work against their longevity.

During my research and writing over the last 30 years I could not find any primary source documents that actually witnessed cannibalism. What I did find was that the Rainforest Bama practised ritualistic, but not gustatory cannibalism. The white intruders needed to have an excuse for their own barbaric behaviour to lay at the Indigenous people’s door – the trouble is that we do not have any primary source documents that support this historical impression of outright cannibalism. You will notice in the primary sources, where they claim ‘cannibalism’ – it’s nearly always third hand, no one actually witnesses the act of a cannibalistic feast. If you wanted to take the land, the Indigenous people had to be portrayed as less than human. All this was to prejudice settler’s against the traditional owners, by the promulgation of ‘cannibalism’ by Europeans, which helped to justify the great land theft.

Remember: “No Australians today is responsible for what happened on our colonial frontier. But we are responsible for not acknowledging what happened. If we do not, our integrity as a nation is flawed and we are shamed as a people for perpetuated a lie.”11

1  C. Feilberg, The Way We Civilise; Black and White; The Native Police: A Series of Articles and letters Reprised from the “Queenslander”, G and J Black, 1880. See also R Ørsted-Jensen, Frontier History Revisited, Lux Mundi Publishing, 2011.
2 H. Reynolds, “Racial Thought in Early Colonial Australia”, The Australian Journal of Politics and History (12974), p.52.
3 T. Bottoms, “Djarrugan, the Last of the Nesting”, MA(Qual) JCU, 1990, p.82, pp.84-86.
4 W. Kracke, “22 Years in North Queensland, How and Why I Went There”, originally delivered as a speech in Omeo, Victoria, c.5 October, 1909. Cairns Historical Society, Doc 1027, p.8.
5 G.C. Bolton, A Thousands Miles Away, Canberra, 1972, p.7.
6 C. Lumholtz, Among Cannibals, !889, Canberra reprint 1980, pp.294-95; R.A. Johnstone, Spinifex & Wattle: Reminiscences of Pioneering in North Queensland, republished articles from The Queenslander, 1903-05, Cairns, rpt 1984, p.59.
7 H. Reynolds (ed), N.S. Kirkman, “From Minority to Majority: An Account of the Chinese Influx to the Palmer River Goldfields,1873-1876”, Race Relations in North Queensland, JCU History Dept., 1978, p.124.
8 N.S. Kirkman, “The Palmer Gold Field 1873 -1883”, Hons., History Dept. JCU, 1984, p.260.
9  https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/evidence-of-first-peoples;  http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2011/09/23/3323640.htm; https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2016-06-07/dna-confirms-aboriginal-people-as-the-first-australians/7481360;
10 The National Geographic Magazine, February 19, 2017.
11  T. Bottoms, Conspiracy of Silence, Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 2013, p.207.

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