28/04/2026
On Saturday, we gathered at the Martin Place Cenotaph to remember and reflect on the honour, courage and sacrifice of Australian servicemen and women.
However, as my dear friend Pastor Ray Minniecon stood to deliver the Acknowledgement of Country, boos rang out.
I was stunned and deeply appalled. What occurred was organised and brazen racism, erupting during one of the most solemn moments of our national calendar.
It was not only an act of hostility towards Pastor Ray and First Nations people; it was a profound act of disrespect to the purpose of ANZAC Day itself, and to everyone who stood there to honour service, sacrifice, and unity.
As always, Ray met the interruption with trademark dignity, strength and grace.
Initially, I did not want to say anything not wishing to draw further attention to such a hurtful act. But silence allows racism to go unchallenged. It is important that we acknowledge what occurred, name it for what it was, and understand the harm it causes.
Racism like this causes real and lasting damage. It retraumatises First Nations people, reinforces exclusion, and sends a message that some do not belong even in spaces intended for collective remembrance and respect.
It diminishes the solemnity of the occasion, undermines the values of service and mateship that ANZAC Day represents, and fractures the sense of shared humanity that moments like these are meant to uphold. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander veterans and their families in particular, such actions are a painful reminder that their service and sacrifice are too often questioned or erased.
Pastor Ray, a proud Kabi‑Kabi and Gurang‑Gurang man and a former member of the Royal Australian Infantry Corps, has given extraordinary service both to his country and to our community. He has been instrumental in many significant initiatives in our city, including the memorial to Indigenous service members in Hyde Park and the annual Coloured Diggers March in Redfern. His contribution to remembrance and reconciliation is immeasurable.
The spontaneous and overwhelming applause that followed his address spoke volumes. It affirmed that acts of racism do not represent the majority, and that respect, inclusion and decency remain our shared values.
As a mark of respect to the Traditional Custodians, our events, official meetings, functions and special occasions begin with a Welcome to Country or an Acknowledgement of Country. This is a gracious and meaningful act one that recognises the oldest continuing cultures in the world and the unbroken connection of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples to Country.
Taking a moment to acknowledge Country will not, on its own, undo the devastating and far‑reaching impacts of colonisation. But it is an honest and necessary reminder that reconciliation requires truth‑telling, respect and courage. An Australia that genuinely honours service, sacrifice and unity must be built on these foundations not undermined by intolerance or hate.
What we witnessed on Saturday underscores an uncomfortable truth: progress has been made, but there is still a long road ahead.
Calling out racism, standing alongside those who are targeted by it, and reaffirming our shared values is essential especially on days when we gather to remember who we are, and who we aspire to be.