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Olive
Pink 1884 - 1975 Aboriginal rights activist
Olive
Muriel Pink (1884-1975), Aboriginal rights activist, was born on
17 March 1884 at Hobart, daughter of Evelyn Fanny Margaret (born
Kerr) and Robert Stuart Pink. She was also known as Injiamba or
Abmoora. Olive was educated at Miss Ayton's school and at the Hobart
Technical School where she studied art under Benjamin Sheppard and
where she met Harold Southern, whose memory she cherished throughout
her life. He was killed at Gallipoli.
She went to Sydney to study with Julian Ashton and returned to Hobart
where she worked as a clerk and art teacher at the Technical School,
and gave private lessons. In 1909 she was awarded a prize for a
flower study in the annual exhibition of the Tasmanian Art Society.
She taught in Perth in 1911-12 and later moved to Sydney where she
worked as a tracer in the Public Works Department and for the Railways
Commission, which she described as purgatory. A collection in Tasmania
of her botanical drawings made between 1912 and 1960 indicates a
continuing interest in art. She purchased two early paintings from
her friend, Albert Namatjira.
Olive retired on a small pension in 1933 and began studying anthropology.
She claimed she was inspired by Anne Lock's work among Aborigines.
She attended Workers' Educational Association courses and enrolled
at the University of Sydney (1932-34) where her initial enthusiasm
was dampened by being required to take supplementary examinations.
In vacations she did fieldwork in Central Australia, at first financing
herself and later funded by the Australian National Research Council.
Initially her work conformed to the academic model and she contributed
the term 'ritual estate' to the literature of anthropology. She
became an outspoken critic of government policies for Aborigines,
which brought her into conflict with A. P. Elkin who was increasingly
influential in policy-making, and she became isolated from academic
anthropology. She advocated recognition of tribal rights in direct
opposition to Elkin's 'civilising' program. In 1935 with support
of the Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement
of Science she approached the federal government to make traditional
Ilpirra hunting ground an Aboriginal reserve. She also demanded
the appointment of women in native affairs administration to combat
the 'strong sex solidarity' of government officials and missionaries,
which she alleged was obscuring the impact of 'white civilisation'
on Aboriginal society. She maintained a vigorous campaign, writing
thousands of letters, for recognition of Aboriginal rights including
right of ownership of 'country'. Between 1942-46 with Quaker and
trade union support, she tried to establish a communal cooperative
among the Wailbri. In 1946 she came in from the desert to live in
Alice Springs. She continued denouncing government policy, opposing
vigorously a pro-visional lease for her friend Namatjira because
it was in Wailbri tribal territory, and he was not Wailbri. She
repeatedly stressed that Aborigines had a right to their 'own territory';
from the Aboriginal point of view this lease was 'stealing . . .
things not in their just power to give to other tribes' people'.
Evicted from her ex-army hut in 1955 she rented some land at Alice
Springs which at her suggestion was declared the Australian Arid
Regions Native Flora Reserve. She accepted honorary curatorship
of the reserve conditional on being allowed to continue campaigning.
In her old age, her eccentric behaviour and long old-fashioned dresses
were laughed at, by Aborigines among others. Yet in the 1940s few
were as forward as Olive Pink in enunciating the principles of justice
in Aboriginal land rights. She died in 1975 on the reserve amidst
the peace and the beauty which she had created there.
Vicki Pearce
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