“I Can’t Breathe”  - Glenn Loughrey

So That We Remember charts a journey in history.

Bringing awareness of Australia’s violent past, documented over a 365-day historical calendar.

Dare to remember…

Charting this colonial history in daily entries.

A verbal and visual guide on a journey that began 233 years ago… Each calendar entry is designed to enable Australians to learn more about the human cost in Indigenous lives that was integral to the colonial occupation of their land.

Since our launch in 2021, we are releasing a month at a time. We invite you to explore and discover what happened “On This Day” in Australian history.

WARNING

This website contains graphic descriptions of historical events from primary sources that may be disturbing to some readers.

Please be aware: Some primary historical sources cited on this website contain words and terms written by non-Indigenous people in the past that today would be regarded as offensive and/or abusive. We have endeavoured to append the adverb ’sic’ to note when these derogatory terms occur.

may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 31.

Reflections on 31 May - Laments and Chains. “On many mornings and evenings I heard their loud laments.”

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 30.

Reflections on 30 May - ‘Conditions of successful colonization’. Colonisation...was not for those of tender or restless conscience.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 29.

Reflections on 29 May - 'Blood and bullet' civilization: Indigenous populations and their despair.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 28.

Reflections on 28 May - Two massacres: Queensland snapshot of a massacre.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 27.

Reflections on 27 May - A National Referendum on 27 May 1967, a momentous turning point in Australian history.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 26.

Reflections on 26 May - ULURU STATEMENT FROM THE HEART.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 25.

Reflections on 25 May - Further ‘dispersals’: Interwoven violence and “deadly dispersals”.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 24.

Reflections on 24 May - Crimes unpunished: Official inaction or murderous action.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 23.

Reflections on 23 May - Pemulwuy’s death: Pemulwuy – dying to defend his homeland.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 22.

Reflections on 22 May - Pemulwuy – war leader: Pemulwuy and ‘open war’ on the Hawkesbury.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 21.

Reflections on 21 May - indigenous holocaust. Squalor in conditions for, and white attitudes of, Tasmanian Indigenous survivors.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 20.

Reflections on 20 May - Disproportionate settler retaliation. Unpaid Aboriginal labour and worse - massacres.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 19.

Reflections on 19 May - ‘...the original owners of the soil,’ and The ‘inhuman’ abduction of Indigenous personnel.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 18.

Reflections on 18 May - Revenging Reprisals: The cost in human lives of retributive raids.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 17.

Reflections on 17 May - Aboriginal access to land: Early mentions of ‘land rights’, reserves and extermination.

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may Ray Barraclough may Ray Barraclough

May 16.

Reflections on 16 May - Instances of ‘Dispersals’. The euphemism of murderous ‘dispersal’.

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Explore the Daily Entries.

Are you an educator? Discover more here.

Thanks to the Hinterland Times for featuring us in their July 2022 edition!

Contact us for Press Inquiries here.

In the spirit of reconciliation, So That We Remember acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community.

We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.

What people are saying…

 

“The act of going through each day and seeing another example from all over the country is really moving and shocking.

…The site looks great and Glenn Loughrey’s artwork is powerful for each month.”

— Mark Dunn, author of The Convict Valley:The Bloody Struggle on Australia’s Early Frontier

“To forget our ancient custodians recent past, to relegate their story to oblivion, is to deny a truth which must be embraced if Australia is to find its own true destiny. I am grateful that some of the words I wrote have been deemed a fit contribution to this journey through time, this calendar of a past that must forever be remembered.”

— John Harris, author of One Blood & We Wish We’d Done More

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Joining the So That We Remember mailing list will ensure you never miss a monthly update to the website from our creator, Ray Barraclough, over a 365-day calendar.