Willow | F7s All Stars
Doing it for Frank
When the Indigenous v NRL All Stars was played this month, it heralded in something far more important than an exhibition match... and far greater than a mere trial.
On the 13th February, 2010, at Robina on the Gold Coast, history was made. A game of rugby league was staged to mark the second anniversary of
The Apology to Indigenous Australians for the Stolen Generation.
For one fantastic night, old divisions were knocked down and 26,628 people celebrated together.
But it has been a long road.
After the game, I grabbed a copy of the souvenir program, the last one as the merchandise was selling out fast. There was an historical section written by fellow forummer, our own Sean Fagan from RL1908.com.
Of course, the Indigenous 'Dream Time' teams of the 21st century are not the first Aboriginal teams to play rugby league. In the 1930s, an all-Aboriginal team from Barambah in Queensland celebrated when their star five-eighth Frank 'King' Fisher was selected to play for Wide Bay against Great Britain.
Grandfather of Olympic gold medalist Cathy Freeman, Fisher was a standout. English skipper Gus Risman nominated Fisher as the best player his team had encountered on the tour of 1936.
Frank Fisher was so impressive that England's Salford club offered him a contract. Frank should have been allowed to follow in the footsteps of legendary Aboriginal sportsman Eddie Gilbert, but Queensland's 'Protector of Aborigines' denied him permission to leave the Cherbourg Mission. The excuse given: it might inspire 'a flood of similar requests' from other Aboriginals.
We can but imagine the effect this had on Fisher and other aspiring Aboriginal sportspeople.
The decision from any state government to deny any Australian the opportunity to travel and play professional rugby league is nothing short of fascism. To base it on colour is straight out racism. The ultimate tragedy is that bureaucracy and bigotry denied a capable man the opportunity to fulfill his potential.
Ironically, Fisher later fought alongside his countrymen in the Middle East during World War Two.
But that was then, this is now.
The optimist in me hopes we have come a long way since then.
This optimism was evident when the Australian National Anthem was played in Queensland on the 13th of February. Everyone stood up and Aboriginal flags were waving. The players were joined by the crowd in singing
Advance Australia Fair. I am not normally prone to sentiment, but on this night I considered it to be a proud Australian moment.
The pre-match entertainment included a sensational war dance, with spears shaping up against the NRL All Stars. Previously used as a World Cup curtain raiser in 2008, the war dance terrified an unsuspecting NZ Maori side that thought it had just delivered a better than average Haka. The dancers representing the Aboriginal team simply blew them off the stage. It goes without saying that it should be used at all international matches where an Australian team is playing. It is uniquely Aussie, and bloody awesome.
The match kicked off and the Indigenous side scored first through Wendell Sailor, setting the bench mark for post-try celebrations when he played the corner post like a didgeridoo while his team mates danced around him. The match was marked by some crunching defence, no place for the faint-hearted. The NRL guys knew they had a game on their hands, and it wasn't long before the crowd got behind the 'locals'. Several times the chant of 'Dream Time' went up - the adopted nickname. This team has some serious barrackers.
In what was a hugely entertaining display of open rugby league football, the 'Dream Time' team eventually won 16-12 after trailing in the final quarter. The winning try was scored by Jamie Soward on the wing after being set up by halfback Johnathan Thurston. Thurston was eventually awarded man-of-the-match.
So on a perfect Saturday night, over 26,000 people turned up - Australians from all backgrounds - a good and vocal third being Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. Families and friends getting together to celebrate the achievments of the first Australians.
What better way to do this other than by watching a game of footy?
For mine, the message was clear. We had just witnessed a true celebration of rugby league and reconciliation. Moreover, the Indigenous side were playing for the multitude of Aboriginal pioneers that went before, particularly those denied their place in the history books.
In many ways, we were doing it for Frank.
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Ref:
http://arthur-palmer.blogspot.com/
Picture 1930s: Above link and Indigenous v NRL All Stars program 2010 - photographer unknown. Frank Fisher holding ball.
Indigenous v NRL All Stars program 2010 (section by Sean Fagan)
Match report: LeagueUnlimited.com
http://www.leagueunlimited.com/article.php?newsid=18852