Indigenous Australian embraces King Charles at civil rights birthplace

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 Britain’s King Charles greets an Indigenous community member during a visit to the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in Sydney, Australia, October 22, 2024. REUTERS

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla visit Australia

Britain’s King Charles embraces an Indigenous community member during a visit to the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in Sydney, Australia, October 22, 2024. REUTERS

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla visit Australia

Britain’s King Charles watches an Indigenous performance during a visit to the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in Sydney, Australia, October 22, 2024. REUTERS

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla visit Australia

Britain’s King Charles takes part in a smoking ceremony during a visit to the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in Sydney, Australia, October 22, 2024. REUTERS

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla visit Australia

Britain’s King Charles and Queen Camilla attend Australian Parliament House for Ceremonial Welcome and Parliamentary Reception, Canberra, Australia October 21, 2024. Victoria Jones/Pool via REUTERS

Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla visit Australia

King Charles is heckled by Australian politician Senator Lidia Thorpe before she was escorted away by security at the Australian Parliament House for Ceremonial Welcome and Parliamentary Reception, Canberra, Australia October 21, 2024. Victoria Jones/Pool via REUTERS

SYDNEY, Oct 22 (Reuters) – Britain’s King Charles was embraced by an Indigenous elder after a welcome smoking ceremony on Tuesday in the birthplace of Australia’s urban Aboriginal civil rights movement in Sydney, a day after being bullied by an Indigenous senator in Canberra.
Charles met with Indigenous elders at the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in inner-city Redfern, including “bush tucker” – or native food – chef Aunty Beryl Van-Oploo, who served kangaroo pies.
Elder Michael Welsh, embraced the king and a woman introduced herself as a member of the Stolen Generation – a reference to Aboriginal children systematically removed from their families decades earlier. “Welcome to this country,” she said.
A day earlier, Charles was heckled at Parliament House in Canberra by independent senator and Indigenous activist Lidia Thorpe who shouted that she did not accept his sovereignty over Australia, and demanded a treaty for Indigenous people.
While the atmosphere at Redfern on Tuesday was respectful, some people who came to see the king expressed sympathy for Thorpe’s actions.
“We’ve got stories to tell and I think you witnessed that story yesterday,” Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council Chairperson Allan Murray said.
In a radio interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Tuesday, Thorpe said she “wanted the world to know the plight of our people”.
Former Olympic athlete Nova Peris, who was the first Indigenous woman elected to federal parliament, wrote in a social media post she was “deeply disappointed” by Thorpe’s actions, which “do not reflect the manners, or approach to reconciliation, of Aboriginal Australians at large”.
Emotions around Indigenous rights and Australia’s colonial history are raw after a national referendum on whether to alter Australia’s constitution to recognise Aboriginal people was rejected last year.
Charles referred to Australia’s “long and sometimes difficult journey towards reconciliation” in a speech on Monday before he was heckled by Thorpe.
Under glorious spring skies, the king later visited a social housing project designed with the support of his King’s Trust Australia charity in the inner suburb of Glebe.
He toured the construction site with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who grew up on a public housing estate, and met Indigenous actor Wes Patten, one of three apprentice construction workers on the project.
Patten played the son of an Indigenous politician in TV political drama “Total Control”, depicting the imagined first Indigenous prime minister of Australia.
Claude Tighe, an Indigenous man in Glebe who saw the Lidia Thorpe protest on social media, said: “I want him to talk to real traditional owners. There’s a lot of us here”.
“She spoke for Aboriginal people,” he added, referring to Thorpe.
Charles and Queen Camilla visit Sydney and Canberra for six days before travelling to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa.
The public will have an opportunity to meet the royal couple at the Opera House later on Tuesday.

Reporting by Kirsty Needham in Sydney; Editing by Stephen Coates

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