Mick Miller (Aboriginal statesman) explained

Mick Miller
Birth Date:16 January 1937
Birth Place:Palm Island, Queensland, Australia
Death Place:Cairns, Queensland, Australia
Resting Place:Cairns
Citizenship:Australian
Known For:Promoting and advocating Australian Aboriginal social justice, rights, and opportunity
Education:Kelvin Grove Teachers College
Occupation:Social activist, land rights campaigner and statesman
Boards:Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI)
Aboriginal Arts Board
North Queensland Land Council
Aboriginal Development Commission
State Tripartite Forum.
Spouse:Pat O'Shane, Barbara Russell
Children:Lydia, Marilyn & Michael Miller

Michael John "Mick" Miller (16 January 1937 – 5 April 1998) was a notable Aboriginal Australian activist, politician, and statesman who campaigned for most of his life seeking greater social justice, land rights, and improved life opportunities for Aboriginal Australians in North Queensland and the rest of Australia.

Early life and education

Michael John Miller was born on 16 January 1937 on Palm Island, Queensland, son of Michael Miller Senior (Waanyi) and Cissie Miller (née Sibley) (Kuku Yalanji), and eldest of seven children (five girls and two boys).[1]

Miller received his primary school education at St Michael's Catholic School at Palm Island. He completed his secondary schooling at Mt Carmel Boarding College at Charters Towers, Queensland.

By 1959 Miller had graduated from Kelvin Grove Teachers College in Brisbane, where he was one of the first Aboriginal Australians in Queensland to become a fully qualified teacher.[1]

Career

After qualifying as a teacher in 1959, Miller was posted to Cairns, Queensland to teach at the North Cairns State Primary School.[1] Some years later he resigned from this position, having encountered some resistance and difficulties within the Department of Education regarding his political activities and attendance at a World Council of Indigenous Peoples in Samiland (Sweden).[1]

In the mid-1960s he obtained some early political training and encouragement by joining the local Aboriginal Advancement League and later the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI), during which time he attended a World Council of Indigenous Peoples[2] meeting at Kiruna in Samiland (Sweden).

Having left teaching, Miller instead became an active member of the local branch of the Aboriginal Advancement League, and, by 1971-1972 had become vice-president of a Federal Council for the Advancement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. He also helped establish the original, politically active and influential North Queensland Land Council, of which he was chair for some time.[1]

Miller also sat as a board member of the Aboriginal Arts Board, and by the 1980s had become a Commissioner with the Aboriginal Development Commission (ADC) and, later, deputy chair of the ADC, from where he sought to promote economic development as the key to getting Aboriginal people off welfare and government dependence.[1]

In 1985, the Commonwealth Government appointed Miller to head up a federal government review of employment, education and training, ultimately producing what came to be known as the "Miller Report".[1] This was a significant Commonwealth Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander training and employment policy document that was to become an Aboriginal employment and training blueprint[3] with "pivotal impact on Government program policies for some time to come".[4]

During the 1990s Miller chaired the State Tripartite Forum (a Queensland Government-sponsored Aboriginal health organisation) and in this way he became involved in many founding state policies and programs to improve the health of the Aboriginal people in Queensland.[1]

Activism

By the early 1970s Miller, along with other local Aboriginal Australians in the Cairns region (including ex-boxing champion and close friend Clarry Grogan), had become active members of a local predominantly Aboriginal branch of the Aboriginal Advancement League; had become effective advocates on the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI); were involved in founding an Aboriginal Legal Service to bring legal assistance to Aboriginal peoples in the North Queensland region; and, with the formation of the North Queensland Land Council in January 1976[5] were campaigning for Aboriginal land rights.[1]

It was during this period that, following national success in the 1967 referendum winning Aboriginal Australians the right to be included on Australian electoral rolls, Miller and Clarry Grogan chose in 1977 to accompany Fred Hollows and his National Trachoma and Eye Health Program team on visits to North Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander reserves. While visiting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, Miller and Grogan assisted people to sign onto electoral rolls,[6] so confirming their reputation with the Queensland Government, and Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen for being trouble-makers and political dissenters:[6]

Film: Couldn't Be Fairer

In 1984 Miller wrote and narrated a film named Couldn't Be Fairer (the expressed point of view of the then Premier of Queensland) about that state's treatment of Aboriginal peoples. The film was produced in collaboration with filmmaker Dennis O'Rourke to bring attention to the social injustices that were endured by Aboriginal people. The film included television footage and clips of politicians and businessmen openly expressing racist views[7] (including Western Australian mining magnate, Lang Hancock suggesting mass sterilisation; a town mayor calling Aboriginal people "savages", and a Queensland Graziers Association spokesperson dividing people into "true Aborigines" and "hybrids".[8])

Personal life

Miller married then-schoolteacher Pat O'Shane on 5 May 1962 at St Monica’s Catholic Cathedral in Cairns, and together they had two daughters, Lydia Caroline and Marilyn Rose Miller.[9]

He met Queensland-born journalist Barbara Joyce Russell in 1973, she moved in with him in 1974. In 1977 Miller dissolved his marriage to O'Shane, and married Russell on 23 July 1978 in the Cairns Botanical Gardens. They had a son together, but split up in 1987.[9]

Death and legacy

Miller died from a heart seizure on 5 April 1998. It was reported that his funeral was attended by over a thousand people.[10]

In 1998 Queensland's Land Rights newspaper summarised and described Miller and his life's contribution as follows:[1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.faira.org.au/lrq/archives/199804/stories/fmiller.html "Mick Miller - Champion of the Oppressed" Queensland's Land Rights Newspaper, Brisbane
  2. http://cwis.org/fwdp/International/wcip_dec.txt World Council of Indigenous Peoples
  3. http://www.voced.edu.au/td/lmr_85.681 "Miller Report"
  4. http://www.ncver.edu.au/research/proj/nr4019e.html "Summary: Review of Indigenous employment programs"
  5. http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/AboriginalLawB/1991/50.html Barbara Miller (1991) "Clayton's Land Rights: The Queensland Aboriginal Land Act - An Aboriginal Coordinating Council Perspective" Aboriginal Law Bulletin 10
  6. http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/news/queensland/sir-joh-expelled-fred-hollows/2008/12/12/1228585086121.html?page=2 Steve Gray (12 December 2008) "Sir Joh 'expelled' Fred Hollows" Brisbane Time.
  7. http://aso.gov.au/titles/documentaries/couldnt-be-fairer/notes/ Australian Screen's "Couldn't be Fairer" Curator Romaine Moreton’s notes
  8. https://fuse.education.vic.gov.au/pages/View.aspx?id=9326ceca-9e76-42d2-b84b-a3d8fe311064 Victorian Department of Education and Early Childhood Development's "Couldn't be Fairer teaching resource web page
  9. Web site: Rowse . Tim . Michael John (Mick) Miller . . 12 June 2024 . 4 September 2024.
  10. http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ILB/1998/50.html Natasha Case et al (1998) "Recent Happenings" Aboriginal Law Bulletin 50