Why don’t Indigenous suicides matter?

5 Mar 2019

The deafening silence across this country following the latest Coronial Inquiry into the suicide deaths of 13 young Aboriginal people in the Kimberley extended beyond the usual non-coverage by mainstream media.

The deafening silence across this country following the latest Coronial Inquiry into the suicide deaths of 13 young Aboriginal people in the Kimberley extended beyond the usual non-coverage by mainstream media, with our political leadership remaining silent; ignoring the intolerable pain of these young people, who saw death as their only option. Their only escape.

Jacob Kagi of the ABC highlighted that in the weeks since the Coroners’ Inquiry into 13 Aboriginal suicides in the Kimberley, not a single question in the Lower House of the WA Parliament has been asked about the coroner’s report, nor what was going to be done about it. Just nine of the 95 Members of Parliament have brought up the inquest during proceedings so far this year in either chamber.

What was of such importance in the weeks following the 7th February that rendered the deaths of these Aboriginal children irrelevant to our state’s political leaders and frankly, to our country?  There is no greater injustice in this world than to be invisible. To feel as if you do not matter. Black lives matter – the lives of our children matter. Whatever the reason for this silence, leadership on this issue has failed, and it has failed our most vulnerable. It is dehumanising and dismissive of the trauma bereaved families face on a daily basis.

It is evident that TRAUMA is inherently political. Politicians and government bureaucrats, especially arms of the state, are central players in the magnification of trauma, including denying the impact of the critical incident, and minimising its severity and impacts.

As psychologists, we know that the first step to healing comes from your trauma being validated through acknowledgment.

As psychologists we know that the first step to healing comes from your trauma being validated through acknowledgement. If this doesn’t happen trauma develops whole new dimensions and becomes magnified. Trauma becomes systemically generated when governmental bodies and societal structures fail to show they care.

Empathy and compassion should be applied EQUALLY, and this must start with our elected leaders showing that they care about what is happening to our Aboriginal children. They should be stepping forward, leaning in, acknowledging the tragedy happening on their watch and responding with compassion and urgency; as you’d expect with the death of any child, let alone 13 of them.

Contributing to this invisibility was the fact that mainstream media reporting was non-existent on these tragic deaths – young Australians filled with so much despair they took their own lives. No headlines of distress or compassion. No call to action to look deeply within ourselves, within our society, within the systems that have contributed to such intergenerational devastation. Just silence.

Politicians respond to public pressure which is often media generated and exerted. Studies support that there exists a ‘hierarchy of newsworthiness’ in which ‘cultural proximity’ to the audience plays a crucial role in the extent of empathy generated for victims (Dowler, Fleming & Muzzatti 2006; see also Meyers 1997). The more the audience relates to victims, the greater the newsworthiness. If the broader community can’t connect in a “this could happen to me or my family” manner, then there is less community outcry, and significantly less pressure on politicians to respond, because ultimately, they are very aware that there will be little to no backlash about it. One wonders if we did not have a publicly funded ABC, SBS or Aboriginal news organisations whether these suicides would have been covered at all? One wonders even more, that if this were 13 non-Aboriginal children would the silence be commensurate with the silence that has followed the suicide deaths of 13 Aboriginal children?

The best I can do as a clinician is to assist my clients to develop a healthy and robust cultural identity and develop the skills and resilience to manage racist events.

Why is race important?

Well because there is increasing evidence and recognition of the impacts of race-based trauma. Bryant-Davis and Ocampo (2005) amongst many others, noted similar courses of mental illness between victims of violent crime and victims of racism. In Australia, racism explains 30% of depression and over 50% of chronic stress experienced by Aboriginal people and Paradies (2016) has shown that racism reduces Aboriginal life expectancy more than SMOKING does – yes you heard that right!

Just as trauma frequently becomes a central organising principle in the psychological structure of the individual, trauma has become a central organising principle in the psychological structure of whole communities. This is known as ‘repetition compulsion’ and, means that those individuals who have had a previous traumatic event are at increased risk for future trauma experiences. Suicide ‘clusters’ being an obvious and common consequence of trauma repetition compulsion.

Racism leads to negative identity formation and poor self-concept which is then passed onto future generations. Stunningly, racism has been shown to impact in-utero, – soberingly demonstrated by infant birth weight being reduced by an average of 600 grams since the NT intervention which repealed the human rights of Aboriginal people. From a suicide prevention perspective, this manifests as a sense of hopelessness and helplessness which has consistently been implicated in suicide risk. When the origin of this lies in racial identity it becomes inherently ‘untreatable’ as a core risk factor. It is unchallengeable as a core driver when a suicidal individual develops thought processes based upon a belief that they don’t matter. When those within the ‘system’ and broader community show no visible sign of caring this cognition then becomes increasingly engrained through daily reinforcement.

The best I can do as a clinician is to assist my clients to develop healthy and robust cultural identity and develop the skills and resilience to manage racist events. This is a constant challenge due to the compounded nature of racism, with the average Aboriginal person having 70 discrete experiences of racism annually and 75% of us regularly experiencing racism.

Epigenetics tells us that racism impacts on Aboriginal people in the same way as a traumatic event.

The fact that most of our suicides are so impulsive makes absolute sense from a trauma perspective.

Let me end with how I started:

Trauma is inherently political.

When those who are mandated to care fail to respond your trauma becomes magnified.

We ultimately look to our leadership for guidance in what resonates in the conscience of our nation.

The silence of our political leaders has served to magnify the trauma of these families and in effect has become systemically perpetuated by them.

Back to Stories
Related posts

Believing in Black knowing and standing in Black power

This article is part of the Black Knowing series, a partnership with QUT’s Carumba Institute and Indigenousx.

A New School of Thought

This article is part of the Black Knowing series, a partnership with QUT’s Carumba Institute and Indigenousx.

Can Counter-Storytelling Enact Black Justice? – (But why?)

This article is part of the Black Knowing series, a partnership with QUT’s Carumba Institute and IndigenousX. Jade Robertson explores, can telling our stories - truthfully, unapologetically - dismantle the systems that silence us?

Enquire now

If you are interested in our services or have any specific questions, please send us an enquiry.