Book Read Free

Holocaust Island

Page 3

by Graeme Dixon

attempted a last stand

  And if it seems

  I don’t worry

  let me tell you why

  Because oppression is oppression

  No matter the shape of the eye.

  Pension day

  The natives are restless

  in their State Housing homes

  Unmarried mothers

  are no longer alone

  Relations are arriving

  from near and afar

  Social Security pensioner

  today you’re a star

  Anxious glances

  are cast up the street

  Postie has a timetable

  he never ever keeps

  Dad swears one day

  he’ll wring his white neck

  Mum says don’t worry

  he’ll lob in a sec

  Young yorga’s15 dream

  of new jeans and shoes

  Yong men scheme

  to cadge money for booze

  Petrol for cars

  more than two dollars worth

  Then it’s off to the TAB

  To invest in the turf

  Even dogs and kids

  are running amok

  they know boya16 will fly

  when the oldies are drunk

  Cokes and lollies

  and everything nice

  Wishin’ wouldn’t it be moorditj17

  if pension days fell twice

  Postie has been

  cheques have been changed

  Food and drink

  have been all arranged

  Dad cracks a bottle

  passes it around

  Says let’s have a charge

  then piss off to town

  Town she jumps

  on pension day nights

  Girls looking for boys

  boys looking for fights

  Tomorrow they’ll be hungover

  some sore—most quiet

  But who gives a shit

  coz tonight Noongahs RIOT!

  15 yorgas—girls Back

  16 boya—money Back

  17 moorditj—good Back

  Single Mum

  She awakens every other morn

  to cries of empty-bellied kids

  tries feeding them with little

  as they reckon Jesus Christ once did

  She spends most the morning

  getting them fed, clean and dressed

  Holding back tears of frustration

  for her is an emotional test.

  The State rents her a concrete box

  in an outer suburban slum

  they promise her a house one day

  she feels this will never come

  for now she’s gotta try make do

  meeting the rent and other bills

  if the loneliness don’t get her

  depression eventually will.

  In winter it’s cold as ice

  in summer as hot as hell

  the plumbing’s always playing up

  there’s a cockroach plague as well

  There’s no carpet on hard floors

  old sheets are used as curtains

  but she has new locks on doors

  around here women can’t be certain.

  The suburb that she lives in

  is rife with vandalism and crime

  she’s virtually a prisoner in a cell

  never venturing out night-time

  If her kids wander out of sight

  she’ll frantically shout their names out

  Everyone says she’s a worrier

  she knows there are deviates about.

  She often dreams of the love

  she gave in her youthful years

  but tries blocking these memories

  they only lead to tears

  Still she’ll forever remember the day

  she awoke to a cold empty bed

  wondering eternally if it was her

  was she the reason why he fled.

  Trying to forget those painful times

  has developed a valium habit

  any pain killers coming her way

  alcohol, drugs, she’ll grab it

  She knows she must stop one day

  but the wounds are far too raw

  and it’s never knowing, that hurts

  what the future holds in store.

  The only sunshine in her life

  is on fortnightly pension days

  the whole block then seems to smile

  and rellies come around to stay

  Sometimes even long lost lovers

  arrive to visit the deserted wives

  but that’s the only sip of water

  in the arid desert of their lives

  So the struggle to survive

  stumbles from one day to the next

  She wishes they prepared her for this

  in High School life skills text

  She often contemplates suicide

  as the only escape from this pit

  But a kiss and cuddle from the kids

  makes her think maybe it’ll be worth it.

  Where?

  Where have they gone

  I often wonder

  Those great Southern Tribes

  Where is the culture

  the lore

  the legends

  those haunting Didgeridoo vibes

  Where are the grey old ones

  to educate

  to enlighten

  the youth in the ways of old

  Where has it all gone

  the traditions

  the land

  has it all been stolen and sold

  Surely they have left us a little

  those invading Europeans

  Just a place

  to call sweet home

  and fulfil our Noongah dreams

  Or is it far too late

  to worry

  to wish

  our lifestyle had remained unchanged

  And do we have to learn

  to live

  to survive

  in a world that’s been re-arranged?

  Oldies

  The far away looks

  in their wrinkled faded eyes

  No longer interested

  in the world outside

  They’d rather gaze inward

  to the memory’s reminisence

  of a long forgotten tribe

  Though reality is dirty streets

  they still see their land

  picturing rolling hills

  and red desert sand

  Hunters and gatherers

  stalking grey kangaroo

  Making wild oat dampers

  and wallaby stew

  Sitting around fires

  under the dreaming stars

  Bush sounds in the night

  uninterrupted by cars

  Listening to the stories

  of forty-thousand years

  When they recollect them now

  they fight back the tears

  Waking in the morning

  to an unpolluted dawn

  Alive and beautiful

  like a new baby born

  With warriors departing

  on an early day stalk

  No rushing or bustling

  just a leisurely bush walk

  The women and children

  gather through the day

  while women toil

  children happily play

  Wise old grey ones

  chatter and sing

  Through well-earned respect

  they’re treated like kings

  But now they sadly realise

  those innocent years have passed

  Shattered and destroyed

  when that first fleet anchor cast

  Now the old ones

  have no land to return to

  They just waste slowly away

  in a state owned ghetto

  And on death they will take

  the last links with
the Dreaming

  While an uninterested youth

  learn the white man’s scheming.

  $2 a bottle dreams

  When the world

  that surrounds me

  seems at its brutal worst

  When my brain

  throbbingly expands

  ready to burst

  When the Government man

  threatens

  to haul me away

  When before my eyes

  I see my hair

  turning grey

  That’s when I must go

  to my local

  Dream-maker

  in the main street

  near the butcher

  and baker

  To ask,

  sick to death

  of so-called normality,

  for a potion

  to distance me

  from reality

  He smiles at me

  with greedy

  glint of eye

  Listens to my problems

  with false

  understanding sighs

  Advises me

  to slow down

  ease off life’s throttle

  then sells me

  my dreams

  two dollars a bottle

  In my

  induced dreams

  it is an undivided nation

  No bigotry,

  prejudice

  or racial discrimination

  No looking down

  noses

  at gentle original tribes

  Towards our

  Asian neighbours

  no antagonistic vibes

  With politicians

  truly united

  for the benefit of all

  Society

  no longer classified

  into the rich

  and the poor

  Greedy

  multinationals

  no longer environmentally

  maim

  Reconditioning

  land and forests

  to before the

  Europeans came

  And all of our children

  laugh sing dance and play

  assured

  that tomorrow

  will bear forth

  a new day

  But then I awake

  feeling remorse and hungover

  when the realisation sets in

  that my dreamtime is over

  Being blatantly

  stared at

  by the taxpayers who pass

  When I catch their eyes

  they look away

  downcast

  Because it’s my kind

  lying sprawled in the park

  that’s a reminder

  of Australia’s history

  so dark

  With all

  to look forward to

  but my next pension day

  I slowly arise

  and stagger away

  and no matter

  how escapist

  to all it may seem

  it’s what

  keeps me going

  my $2 a bottle dreams

  Hypocritic sponsorship

  This TRULY MAGNIFICENT

  SPORTING SPECTACULAR

  is so PROUDLY

  BOUGHT TO YOU BY

  cirrhosis of the liver

  BREWERIES,

  THE LAGER

  THAT REAL MEN BUY!

  In conjunction with

  the COMPANY

  THAT GAVE YOU

  lung cancer cigarettes

  And JUST FOR YOU

  gambling folk,

  THE STATE HAS SUPPLIED

  FACILITIES TO BET

  We’d also PROUDLY

  like to remind you

  that the MANAGEMENT

  of these

  AUSTRALIAN COMPANIES

  have DONATED

  A BIG FAT CHEQUE!

  to HELP stamp-out

  MARIJUANA DEALERS

  and JUNKIE WRECKS

  Because, with

  DEEP SYMPATHY,

  they realise

  that DRUGS RUIN LIVES

  of INNOCENT KIDS!

  And this country

  WON’T BE SAFE

  till ALL FORMS

  OF ADDICTION

  have been rid!

  Also,

  they are opening

  a TRUST FUND

  in the not too

  distant future time

  TO AID A CAUSE

  THAT NEEDS

  PUBLIC SUPPORT!

  A FREE

  suicidal assistance

  telephone line

  And you women

  in the audience

  don’t worry,

  you’ve not been

  left out,

  as they’re starting

  a CRISIS CENTRE

  FOR THOSE LADIES

  WHOSE DRUNK HUBBIES

  knock them about

  And also

  YOU BEAUTIFUL KIDS

  they have

  A PROJECT

  JUST FOR YOU’S

  They will GIVE

  two cents an empty,

  so make sure

  your folks

  DRINK MORE BOOZE!

  Lung cancer cigarettes

  have a SCHOLARSHIP

  AVAILABLE

  FOR THE FUTURE

  All you

  have to do

  IS SMOKE

  their teenage label

  And finally

  the MINISTER reminds you

  that these

  companies

  HELP fill

  state coffers

  and the money

  IS NEEDED

  BY THE PEOPLE

  NO MATTER WHAT

  is said

  by the COMMUNIST scoffers.

  A unfortunate life

  Born in the country

  well, not exactly in

  more on the fringe

  in a hession humpy

  near a dry river

  by decree of dominant law

  no longer a nomadic liver

  Innocent childhood years

  flew too swiftly past

  innocence replaced

  by tears and fears

  when realisation set in

  that he differed

  as did the rest of his kin

  from the wajella18 kids

  who played in town

  at night he shamefully regretted

  his skin was so brown

  Attempted education

  deserted it too soon

  Understood English

  except strange words

  like coon

  boongturd

  black nigger

  Seemed life was

  black gun to temple

  white finger squeezing trigger.

  On becoming a man

  mum said “go!”

  “leave this cruel land

  for you to live

  to survive

  you must desert our clan

  as this white man’s town

  full of prejudice and shame

  will keep you down

  as long as they can see

  your skin is so brown”

  He died a little

  he cried a lot

  the day they sent him away

  He begged his father

  “Let me stay

  I’d much rather live

  the Noongahs’ way”

  But dad remained strict

  “Your future is lost

  in your home town

  you’ll always be bossed

  and pushed around

  Go to the city

  live with Aunty Vi,

  there’s no guarantees

  but give it a try”

  Reluctantly he left

  his family so sad

  That land may not be his

  but it was all he had

  a fe
eling

  an instinct

  deep in his heart—

  to that land

  he was a vital part

  City life

  what a mistake!

  Racism rife

  worse than the bush

  Tried to find work

  without any success

  so with other lost lads

  around pubs he lurked

  Aunty couldn’t afford

  six kids and him

  “I’ll move out”

  he told her on whim

  “Karne!19 My nephew”

  She said angrily

  “You’re my sister’s son

  your blood flows through me”

  But still he went

  with a fragment of pride

  a legacy of ancestors

  now on the other side

  to live in the parks

  by city riverbanks

  where after dark

  he joined the homeless ranks

  Harassed by police

  like all parkies are

  there was no peace

  sleeping under neon stars

  Life became a cycle

  of crime, wine and jail time

  He finally realised

  there was no happy ends

  he decided to abandon

  his derelict friends

  They found him one day

  suspended from a tree

  In a grave he now lays

  Nodytch!20

  but eternally free.

  18 wajella—white person Back

  19 karne (karn ya)—foolish, weak Back

  20 nodytch—dead, the departed Back

  To let

  Nice flat to let

  the rental notice said

  that’s partly furnished

  with large double bed

  scenic ocean views

  in a small quiet block

  close to the port

  near the south dock

  I give it a ring

  in the early morn

  we needed a place

  before baby was born

  “come over and view”

  the caretaker said

  so I got the Mrs

  out of mum’s bed

  “A home of our own”

  she blissfully sighed

  “I dearly wish

  no one else has applied”

  “Don’t worry sweetheart”

  I said confident

  “I’ve got a good job

  to settle the rent”

  As soon as he saw us

  it showed in his eyes

  the critical look

  the sarcastic sigh

  “I’m sorry mate”

  he said with a smirk

  “we only rent

  to those who work”

  “I am employed!”

  I answered frustrated

  “and the finance companies

 

‹ Prev