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Home » Blog » Articles » Michael Roberts » Offensive Racist Place-Names face Offensive – By Michael Roberts
ArticlesMichael Roberts

Offensive Racist Place-Names face Offensive – By Michael Roberts

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Last updated: February 5, 2025 9:32 am
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Offensive Racist Place-Names face Offensive – By Michael Roberts

Michael Roberts

Source : thuppahis

A News Item in Australia, Today, February 2025

In short: The Queensland government has identified 43 place names with racist slurs and a Darumbal elder wants them changed immediately. The state amended legislation in April so racist place names could be changed without broad community consultation.What’s next?Queensland’s Department of Resources says the process to change the names will take time, but it is underway.

Black Gin Creek and Little Uncle Tom mountain are among the 43 place names in Queensland containing racial slurs with a traumatic history.

  • n short:The Queensland government has identified 43 place names with racist slurs and a Darumbal elder wants them changed immediately.
  • The state amended legislation in April so racist place names could be changed without broad community consultation.
  • What’s next?Queensland’s Department of Resources says the process to change the names will take time, but it is underway.

WARNING: This article contains racist and offensive language and images. The ABC has chosen to show images, which include offensive language, to illustrate the racism referenced in this reporting.

Black Gin Creek and Little Uncle Tom mountain are among the 43 place names in Queensland containing racial slurs with a traumatic history.

Darumbal elder Aunty Sally Vea Vea has spent many years campaigning to change them.

“I always found it to be very offensive when I’d see that the real estate would have houses for sale on ‘Black Gin Creek Road’ and I thought, ‘When is this ever going to stop?’”Aunty Sally said.

“We find it to be dehumanising, upsetting, and discriminatory.”

An audit revealed 43 creeks, hills, or other geographic features that feature racial slurs in their names.

Aunty Sally passionately speaking into a microphone, holding A4 deed, trees behind her.

Aunty Sally spoke at an event a couple of years ago where land her ancestors were massacred on at Gai-i was returned to the Darumbal People. (ABC Capricornia: Erin Semmler)

Aunty Sally wants these names changed immediately. “We want to see these offensive names removed … from places that evoke horrific memories of atrocious acts,” she said.

“How do we answer our children and the future generations [if we] continue to allow these derogatory names, these dehumanising names, to be … there in front of our faces as we drive along the road?”

A traumatic slur

Aunty Sally said “gin” was originally an affectionate word in Darumbal language used by men towards women, but it was turned into a derogatory term by the British and Europeans.

In central Queensland, the Rockhampton Regional Council recently changed the name of Black Gin Creek Road in Alton Downs to Gum Tree Creek Road at the request of the Darumbal People.

Aunty Sally wearing a headband, yellow shirt, straight face, trees and tent behind.

Aunty Sally says it causes anger and division when offensive names remain. (ABC Capricornia: Erin Semmler)

The road was named after the creek, which Aunty Sally successfully petitioned Queensland’s Department of Resources to change from Black Gin Creek to Dundula, meaning gum tree, in 2020.

She said the creek was originally named by people who were most likely involved in a massacre of her people at Morinish. “These creeks are so named because our women were raped and killed and shot and left to die in those creeks,” Aunty Sally said.

“It brings a peace when you know, the young lady who was most probably raped and shot there in that creek, we wanted justice for her and I think … that justice has been served.”

Amendments to legislation passed in April this year mean extensive public consultation will no longer be required to change 43 place names the government identified as racist, such as Yellow Gin Creek, Jap Creek, or Little Uncle Tom mountain.

Queensland Labor MP Scott Stewart speaks to the media in Brisbane.

Queensland Labor MP Scott Stewart tabled the list of racist place names in parliament. (ABC News: Tim Swanston)

The reforms mean the government will only be required to do two rounds of consultation on name changes, asking the community what name it should change to and if the public was satisfied with that name.

Previously a third round was required to decide if a racist place name should be changed.

The department said it took time to organise and have those discussions, but the process was underway.

‘There has to be truth telling’

The department said since 2017, six contentious place names had been changed at the request of local traditional owners. These include Baga, Gai-i, Dundula Creek, Watyakan Creek, Bana Gindarja Creek, and K’gari.

Ten other place names with racist slurs were also removed from north Queensland.

Both Baga and Gai-i in central Queensland were changed at the request of Aunty Sally, among other Darumbal traditional owners. But she said there was still more to be done in recognising her people’s history.

A large mountain with two humps, tall grass and trees in foreground, blue sky in background.

Gai-i is a sacred mountain located between Rockhampton and Yeppoon. (ABC Capricornia: Erin Semmler)

Aunty Sally wants to see Mount Wheeler Road changed to Gai-i-Mount Wheeler Road, which she said would recognise Darumbal people while acknowledging the history of Frederick Wheeler. Wheeler was involved in Aboriginal massacres across Queensland in the 1800s.

“Let’s correct what happened in the past, don’t whitewash it and don’t pretend it never happened,” Aunty Sally said. “There has to be truth-telling to bring healing.”

Aunty Sally said she would also like more recognition of First Nations place names, like renaming the Fitzroy River to its traditional name of Tunuba.

The ABC contacted Queensland’s Minister for Treaty Leanne Enoch and asked whether renaming place names was still a priority of the government when establishing a treaty with First Nations people.

She did not respond to the question.

A close-up of Leeanne Enoch, who has a dark brown updo and is wearing a pink blazer

Queensland Minister for Treaty and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships Leanne Enoch. (ABC News: Christopher Gillette)

When renaming K’gari in 2022 the Queensland government said the move would support reconciliation and Queensland’s Path to Treaty Commitment.

A spokesperson for the minister said the resources department would continue to engage with the community on place name changes. “It’s important to continue to have mature and respectful conversations about offensive place names in our community,” it said.

Aunty Sally said the government’s slow progress was not good enough. “It’s very emotional, it stirs up a lot of anger and a lot of division when you don’t change those names,” she said.

 

 

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