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Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Google's Australia Day (January 26)Doodle focuses on Aboriginals

Google said it was proud to publish the doodle focusing on Aboriginals on Australia Day [Google] 

In line with its custom of celebrating national holidays with individual "Google Doodles", Google's Australian search page www.google.com.au on Tuesday published a doodle created by Canberra High School student Ineka Voigt.

Her artwork "Stolen Dreamtime" won a competition which called on student artists to produce a piece of work in response to the theme, "If I could travel back in time I would..."

The piece shows an Aboriginal mother and two children in a desert setting.

Describing her work, Voigt said: "I would reunite mother and child. A weeping mother sits in an ochre desert, dreaming of her children and a life that never was ... all that remains is red sand, tears and the whispers of her stolen dreamtime."

The decision to use a piece of art focusing purely on Aboriginal Australians comes as debate continues about when Australia Day should be celebrated.

Indigenous peoples and those against the celebrations being held on January 26, commonly refer to Australia Day, marking the start of the first British colony in Australia in 1788, as "Invasion Day" or "Survival Day".

They say Australia Day marks the start of the mass slaughter of Aboriginals that occurred under British rule and the serious discrimination against the country's indigenous peoples that exists to this day.

Each year, the "Australia Day vs Invasion Day" debate becomes a political issue, but so far no national government has indicated that it would be willing to change the date of national celebrations.


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