|
Pearl
Gibbs 1901 - 1983 Aboriginal leader
Pearl
Gibbs (1901-1983), Aboriginal leader known also as Gambanyi (in
Ngiyamba), was a daughter of Maggie Brown and stepdaughter of Dick
Murray, both from Brewarrina. Pearl grew up round Yass (where her
mother worked as a domestic servant) and later in the Brewarrina
area. She attended racially-segregated schools at Yass and Cowra
but otherwise the family avoided direct control by the Aborigines
Protection Board, living only briefly on Brewarrina 'Mission' and
privately arranging employment for Pearl and her sister Olga in
Sydney as domestics in 1917. Through the 1920s Pearl worked as a
maid and cook and married an English sailor named Gibbs. They later
separated, leaving Pearl to raise their daughter and two sons.
Politically active in the late 1920s Pearl assisted Aboriginal 'apprentices'
(girls indentured by the Aborigines Protection Board as domestics),
then in the early 1930s organised strikes among Aboriginal pea pickers
at Nowra. At Wallaga Lake in the mid 1930s, she experienced Board
control and, again, organised protests. From 1937, Pearl became
a major figure in the Aboriginal political network as it re-established
itself after the depression. She was an early member of the Aborigines'
Progressive Association, appearing at meetings in Sydney's Domain,
drawing large crowds because a woman speaker was rare and because
Pearl spoke with such fluency and passion. During this campaign
for full citizen rights and an end to the Aboriginal Protection
Board, Pearl concentrated on issues directly involving women: 'apprenticeships',
school segregations, health, hospital segregation and the meagre
Board rations. She successfully lobbied many women's organisations,
including the Sydney Feminist Club, and made wider alliances with
centre and left political groups than other Aboriginal activists
in New South Wales at that time.
Pearl was involved in organising the Day of Mourning on the 26 January
1938 to protest the invasion, then took a prominent part in the
subsequent deputation to Prime Minister J. A. Lyons. While secretary
of the all-Aboriginal Aborigines' Progressive Association from 1938-40,
Pearl steered a middle way between regionally-based factions, and
sustained her activities despite the setback to the movement when
it became clear in 1939 that there would be no real changes in the
'new' Aborigines Welfare Board. Pearl spoke frequently for the Committee
for Aboriginal Citizen Rights, a predominantly white organisation
formed in 1938 to mobilise public opinion. Broadcasting over Sydney
and Wollongong radio in June 1941 and writing for the press in 1942,
she supported Northern Territory Aborigines in their widely publicised
conflicts with a frontier 'justice' system and called for Aboriginal
representation on the New South Wales Welfare Board.
In 1946 Pearl established the first formal link between Aborigines
in two states when she and Bill Ferguson set up the Dubbo branch
of the Australian Aborigines' League, the Melbourne-based body founded
by William Cooper in 1933. After being vice-president then secretary
of this branch, Pearl became, in 1953, the organising secretary
for a new Melbourne-based Council for Aboriginal Rights, while intensifying
her campaign against discrimination in rural areas and attacking
the Welfare Board. In 1954 she was elected as the Aboriginal member
of the Board and its only woman member. Although she stayed till
1957, Pearl found this position frustrating: she was denied access
to Board- controlled reserves and excluded from the real decision-making
processes of the male bureaucrats and academics who made up the
rest of the Board.
In March 1956 Pearl and Faith Bandler established the Australian
Aboriginal Fellowship, a New South Wales body which included both
Aboriginal and white members and which affiliated to the first national
Aboriginal organisation, the Federal Council of Aborigines and Torres
Strait Islanders. While vice-president of the Australian Aboriginal
Fellowship, Pearl's fine organisational ability and wide contacts
enabled the high Aboriginal attendance at the public rally in Sydney
in 1957 which opened the campaign to remove the discriminatory clauses
in the federal constitution, a goal achieved in 1967. After establishing
the first hostel for Aboriginal hospital patients and their families,
in Dubbo in 1960, Pearl continued her political activities, organising
a Fellowship conference in 1965 and then attending most major Aboriginal
conferences in New South Wales until failing health limited her
travelling. She was an active contributor to the meetings throughout
the 1970s which established an independent New South Wales Land
Council and then pressured the state government towards land rights
legislation.
Pearl Gibbs' legacy endures. She nurtured organisations through
difficult times, building lasting links between Aboriginal communities
and between Aboriginal organisations and a wide range of allies.
Her astute judgements and her insistence on principle stimulated
debate inside and outside the Aboriginal movement and fuelled the
struggle for justice. As Kevin Gilbert has said of her: 'She lived
and breathed, ached and bled Aboriginal politics.' Yet Pearl saw
her commitment to Aboriginal rights as part of a struggle for human
rights and inter- national peace. She was a powerful advocate for
justice for all Aborigines, whether in the south-east or in remote
areas, and she was particularly significant in focussing attention
on the way Aboriginal women bore the brunt of poverty and oppressive
policies.
Heather Goodall
Aboriginal History 1983 pp 1-22.
|