All Thinkers

Oodgeroo Noonuccal

Oodgeroo Noonuccal was an Aboriginal Australian poet, activist, teacher, and artist. She was the first Aboriginal Australian to publish a book of poetry. Her work helped shape modern Aboriginal political and cultural identity. She was born in 1920 on Stradbroke Island, off the coast of Queensland in eastern Australia. The island is called Minjerribah in her language. Her birth name was Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska. In 1988, the year of Australia's bicentennial, she changed her name to Oodgeroo Noonuccal. 'Oodgeroo' is the Noonuccal word for 'paperbark', a tree common on her island. 'Noonuccal' is the name of her people. The name change was a public political act. She wanted a name that came from her own land, not from English colonisers. She grew up in poverty under harsh laws that controlled Aboriginal lives. Aboriginal Australians could not vote, marry without permission, or move freely. Her family lived on government rations. She left school at 13 to work as a domestic servant in white households. During World War II she joined the Australian Women's Army Service, one of the first Aboriginal women to do so. In 1964 she published her first poetry book, We Are Going. It sold out quickly. She became a major activist for Aboriginal rights. She helped lead the campaign for the 1967 referendum that finally allowed Aboriginal Australians to be counted as citizens. She wrote books for children, painted, and ran a cultural centre on her island. She died in 1993, aged 72. Her son Vivian taught and worked alongside her.

Origin
Australia (Noonuccal people, Stradbroke Island/Minjerribah)
Lifespan
1920 - 1993
Era
Modern / 20th-Century Australia
Subjects
Aboriginal Australian Writing Indigenous Studies 20th Century Australian Literature Civil Rights
Why They Matter

Oodgeroo matters for three reasons. First, she was the first Aboriginal Australian to publish a book of poetry. Her 1964 collection We Are Going was a turning point. Aboriginal voices had not appeared in Australian literature in this serious public way before. The book sold out quickly. It was followed by other collections. Aboriginal writing is now a recognised and respected part of Australian literature.

Oodgeroo opened the door

Second, she was a major figure in Aboriginal political activism in the 1960s and 1970s. She helped lead the campaign for the 1967 referendum, which removed clauses from the Australian constitution that excluded Aboriginal people from being counted as citizens. The referendum passed with over 90 percent support, an extraordinary majority. Oodgeroo travelled across Australia speaking, writing, and organising. Her public visibility helped change white Australian opinion at a critical moment.

Third, she insisted on the value of Aboriginal culture as living tradition. She wrote children's books drawing on Aboriginal stories. She ran a cultural centre called Moongalba on her island, welcoming visitors of all backgrounds to learn about Aboriginal life.

She painted

She taught. She worked across art forms because she thought Aboriginal culture had to be experienced fully, not just discussed. After her death, Aboriginal arts have continued to grow in influence within Australia and beyond. She was a foundational figure for this development.

Key Ideas
1
We Are Going
2
The 1967 Referendum
3
Why She Changed Her Name
Key Quotations
"We are nature and the past, all the old ways gone now and scattered."
— Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 'We Are Going', 1964
This is the closing line of the title poem from Oodgeroo's first book. The poem describes Aboriginal people coming to what was once a sacred meeting ground and is now a rubbish dump. They name all the things that are gone or going. The closing line gathers everything together. We are nature: tied to specific lands, plants, animals, weather. We are the past: we hold what came before us. The old ways gone and scattered: this is not abstract loss but specific destruction. The line is short and devastating. It tells the truth without raising its voice. For students, the line is a good way into Oodgeroo's poetic style. She did not write decorative or complicated poetry. She wrote what she saw and felt, in plain English, and trusted readers to feel it too. Many of her best poems work this way. They land hard because they say true things simply.
"Let no one say the past is dead. The past is all about us and within."
— Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 'The Past', 1970
These lines open a poem called 'The Past'. Oodgeroo speaks against the common idea that what happened to Aboriginal peoples is over and should be left alone. White Australians sometimes told Aboriginal people: forget the past, look forward. Oodgeroo refused. The past, she said, is not dead. It is in the land, in the bodies, in the families, in everything that surrounds us. The harm continues to shape the present. The healing has to address it. The poem is one of her most quoted. For students, the lines are useful for thinking about how the past works in any community. Stories from a hundred years ago still affect what families talk about today. Pretending the past is dead does not make it dead. Acknowledging it is sometimes the first step towards anything else. Oodgeroo said this clearly long before the modern conversation about historical trauma.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing students to Aboriginal Australian thought
How to introduce
Tell students that Aboriginal Australians have lived on the continent for at least 65,000 years. This is one of the oldest continuous human cultures in the world. British colonisation began in 1788, only about 240 years ago. The clash between very ancient cultures and a new colonial system caused enormous damage. Oodgeroo Noonuccal is one of the most important Aboriginal writers of the 20th century. Her work helped Australians, both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal, understand what had happened and what was still happening. For students just meeting Aboriginal Australia, her writing is a clear and direct way in.
Creative Expression When teaching students about poetry that does political work
How to introduce
Read with students Oodgeroo's poem 'We Are Going'. The poem describes a group of Aboriginal people coming to a place that was their gathering ground and is now a rubbish dump. Discuss with students what the poem does. It mourns. It also accuses. It does not lecture. It just describes, and the reader feels the loss. Poetry can do political work without becoming propaganda. Oodgeroo was a master of this balance. The poem is specific (this place, these people, this rubbish dump) but speaks for a wider experience. Students writing about serious subjects can learn from her example. Specificity carries the weight that abstractions cannot.
Ethical Thinking When teaching students about historical injustice
How to introduce
Tell students about the Stolen Generations. Between roughly 1910 and 1970, the Australian government took Aboriginal children from their families. The aim was to assimilate them into white society. Many were abused. Most lost their language and culture. Oodgeroo wrote about this with anger because the facts were terrible. Discuss with students what to think about historical wrongs that have not been fully repaired. The 2008 Australian government apology mattered. So did the truth-telling work that came before it. So does the work that continues. The case raises deep questions about how communities live with their history. The questions matter for many other countries too, including those where the wrongs are much closer to home for the students.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, Oodgeroo's My People (1970, several reissues) collects her major poems and is the standard starting point. Stradbroke Dreamtime (1972) collects her stories for children based on Aboriginal traditions. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation has produced several documentaries about her life. Bruce Pascoe's Dark Emu (2014) gives wider context for understanding pre-colonial Aboriginal Australia, though some of its claims are now debated. The University of Queensland Press has published much of her work.

Key Ideas
1
What Australia Did to Aboriginal Peoples
2
The Stolen Generations
3
Moongalba
Key Quotations
"Look up, my people. The dawn is breaking. The world is waking to a bright new day."
— Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 'A Song of Hope', 1960s
Not all of Oodgeroo's writing was sad or angry. 'A Song of Hope' is one of several poems where she wrote about the possibility of change. The lines above call to her people to look up and see the dawn. The poem is direct. It uses the image of a new day to suggest a new era for Aboriginal Australians. The language is plain. The emotion is clear. Some critics found her hopeful poems too simple. Others saw them as part of her work as a community leader. Different kinds of poems serve different purposes. Some name the loss. Some accuse the wrongdoers. Some call the wounded community towards something better. Oodgeroo wrote all three kinds. For students, the line is a useful balance to her sadder work. Hope and grief can sit together. A great political writer often has to write both.
"Black tribe, yellow tribe, red, white or brown, from where the sun jumps up to where it goes down."
— Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 'All One Race', 1960s
These lines from the poem 'All One Race' show another side of Oodgeroo's thinking. She fought for the specific rights of Aboriginal Australians. She also believed in a wider human family. The poem is direct: people of all colours, from the eastern horizon to the west, are one race. The lines do not deny that Aboriginal peoples have specific histories and rights. They place those rights inside a wider commitment to human equality. The combination is important. Some Aboriginal activists have focused only on Aboriginal-specific concerns. Others have framed Aboriginal causes inside wider human rights frameworks. Oodgeroo did both. She thought specific rights and universal humanity needed each other. For students, the lines are a useful starting point for thinking about how minority rights and universal values fit together. They are not opposed. They support each other in serious political thought, including Oodgeroo's.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When teaching students about names and identity
How to introduce
Tell students about Oodgeroo's name change in 1988. She was born Kathleen Ruska. She was published for years as Kath Walker. In 1988 she rejected her English names and became Oodgeroo Noonuccal. Discuss with students what a name change like this means. Names carry history. Some are imposed by colonial powers. Some come from family. Some come from chosen identity. Oodgeroo took back her own. She also returned a British honour around the same time. The combination was a clear statement. She would not carry markers of the colonial system that had hurt her people. Discuss with students how names work in their own lives and communities. The conversation can be rich.
Emotional Intelligence When teaching students about anger and hope together
How to introduce
Read with students Oodgeroo's angry poems alongside her hopeful ones. 'We Are Going' is angry. 'A Song of Hope' is hopeful. Both come from the same writer in similar periods of her life. Discuss with students how a person can hold both feelings. Oodgeroo was angry about real injustices. She was hopeful about what could come next. Neither feeling cancelled the other. The combination is what serious political work looks like. People who are only angry burn out or push others away. People who are only hopeful miss the work that needs to be done. Holding both, carefully, lets a person keep going for decades, as Oodgeroo did. For students dealing with their own difficult feelings about the world, this is a useful model.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, Kathie Cochrane's Oodgeroo (1994) is the standard biography. Anita Heiss's Dhuuluu-Yala: To Talk Straight, Publishing Indigenous Literature (2003) gives essential context for understanding Oodgeroo's place in Australian publishing. Aileen Moreton-Robinson's Talkin' Up to the White Woman (2000) examines Aboriginal women's intellectual leadership. The journal Australian Aboriginal Studies has published widely on Oodgeroo and related figures.

Key Ideas
1
Was Her Poetry Good as Poetry?
2
Aboriginal Languages
3
Her Quaker Connection
Key Quotations
"I am a part of all things, all things are part of me, I am the bird that flies above the tree."
— Oodgeroo Noonuccal, 'Stradbroke Dreamtime' and related works
Lines like this appear throughout Oodgeroo's work. She drew on Aboriginal traditional thought, in which humans, animals, plants, and land are deeply connected. The bird is not just outside the speaker. The speaker is the bird, and the bird is the speaker. Western philosophy generally separates the human self from the rest of nature. Aboriginal thought, like many indigenous traditions, does not draw the line so sharply. Oodgeroo wrote this idea in plain English so non-Aboriginal readers could begin to understand it. For advanced students, the lines connect Oodgeroo to wider indigenous philosophical traditions, including those of Native Americans, the Maori, and others. Modern environmental thought has begun to take such ideas more seriously. Robin Wall Kimmerer, for example, makes similar arguments from a Native American perspective. Oodgeroo was making them in 1960s and 1970s Australia, when few non-indigenous Australians took her seriously. She was decades ahead of much mainstream Western thinking.
"I am a black, no, I am brown, but the Australian Government insists that I am black."
— Reported in interviews with Oodgeroo Noonuccal
Oodgeroo had a sharp wit. This line captures her impatience with the categories used by Australian race law. She had skin that she would call brown. Government records called her black. She did not fit cleanly into the racial categories Australia had imported from Europe and adapted for its own purposes. The categories were used to control Aboriginal lives, including who counted as 'half-caste', 'quadroon', or 'full-blood'. These terms were used in actual government policy until well into the 20th century. They determined whether children were taken from their families, whether people could marry, where they could live. Oodgeroo's wry observation cuts through the absurdity. The government could not even agree what colour she was. Yet on the basis of these confused categories, lives were destroyed. For advanced students, the line is a useful example of how race categories work in practice. They are not natural divisions of humanity. They are administrative tools, often inaccurate, used to control populations. Oodgeroo saw this clearly and named it without hesitation.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When teaching students about how literary value is judged
How to introduce
Discuss with advanced students the early debates about Oodgeroo's poetry. Some critics dismissed her work as propaganda rather than poetry. Others praised it. Discuss what 'good poetry' means. Different traditions answer differently. Some value technical complexity above all. Some value emotional clarity. Some value political relevance. Some value formal innovation. Oodgeroo's work was strong on emotional clarity and political relevance, less on technical complexity. By some standards she was a major poet. By others she was a minor one. Modern Australian opinion has largely come to view her generously. The discussion teaches students that 'good' in art is not a single fixed standard. Different communities and traditions evaluate art differently. All the standards can be defended. None is the only one.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When teaching students about indigenous languages
How to introduce
Tell students that when British colonisation began in 1788, Aboriginal Australians spoke around 250 languages. Today perhaps 100 survive in some form, and only about 20 are still being learned by children. The decline is a direct result of colonial policies, including forbidding children to speak their languages in mission schools. Oodgeroo wrote in English because she had been educated in English. Modern Aboriginal communities are engaged in serious language revival work. Discuss with students what is at stake. A lost language takes with it ways of seeing, naming, and feeling that no other language carries in the same way. Once lost without recordings, it cannot be fully recovered. The work of preserving and reviving Aboriginal languages is some of the most urgent cultural work in Australia today. The same is true for indigenous languages around the world.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Aboriginal Australians arrived in Australia recently.

What to teach instead

They did not. Aboriginal Australians have lived on the continent for at least 65,000 years. Some recent dating suggests possibly even longer. This is one of the longest continuous human presences in any single region in the world. The British arrived in 1788. The colonial period is recent compared with Aboriginal history. The popular idea that Aboriginal Australians 'came from Asia' fairly recently misrepresents the deep timeframe involved. Aboriginal cultures, languages, technologies, and art systems developed in Australia over an immense span of time. Oodgeroo lived inside this long history. Her work draws on traditions that are tens of thousands of years deeper than the colonial culture that surrounded her.

Common misconception

The 1967 referendum gave Aboriginal Australians the vote.

What to teach instead

It did not. Aboriginal voting rights varied by state and were complicated. Some Aboriginal Australians had been able to vote in some states for decades before 1967. The 1967 referendum did something different. It removed clauses from the Australian constitution that excluded Aboriginal people from being counted in the census and that prevented the federal government from making laws specifically about them. The referendum changed the constitutional status of Aboriginal Australians. It did not change voting rights directly. The mistake is common because the referendum is often taught as a simple civil rights victory. The reality is more specific and more complicated. The full picture matters for understanding what was achieved and what was not.

Common misconception

Oodgeroo was just a poet.

What to teach instead

She was a poet, but also an activist, teacher, painter, children's writer, and cultural leader. Her poetry was one part of a much wider working life. She helped lead the 1967 referendum campaign. She ran a cultural centre at Moongalba on her island. She wrote books for children based on Aboriginal stories. She painted. She lectured at universities. She advised governments. Treating her only as a poet underestimates her impact. Her poetry was the most public part of her work, but she did much more. The breadth was deliberate. She believed Aboriginal culture had to be experienced fully, not just discussed in books.

Common misconception

Aboriginal Australians today live mostly traditional lives in the desert.

What to teach instead

Most do not. Most Aboriginal Australians today live in cities and towns, like most other Australians. Some live in remote communities. Many move between city and country. They work in every kind of job: as teachers, doctors, lawyers, artists, tradespeople, public servants, and many other things. Aboriginal communities are diverse and modern, just like other Australian communities. The popular image of Aboriginal life as exclusively traditional and remote is inaccurate. Oodgeroo herself lived in cities much of her life. Her work was done in modern Australian society. Honest engagement with Aboriginal Australia means dropping the desert-and-tradition image and seeing the variety of how people actually live today.

Intellectual Connections
Complements
Vine Deloria Jr.
Deloria, the great Native American intellectual, worked in parallel with Oodgeroo across the Pacific. Both were indigenous thinkers writing in the 1960s and 1970s. Both combined activism with serious cultural work. Both insisted that indigenous peoples could speak for themselves. Both faced opposition from settler governments and academic establishments. Reading them together gives students a sense of how indigenous thought developed across continents in the same period. Different specific situations, similar fundamental work. Deloria worked from Sioux country in the United States. Oodgeroo worked from Stradbroke Island in Australia. Their work supports each other across the ocean.
Complements
Linda Tuhiwai Smith
Smith, the Maori scholar, came after Oodgeroo. Her work on indigenous research methods builds on the foundation that activist-thinkers like Oodgeroo helped lay. Smith argued that indigenous peoples could and should study themselves on their own terms. Oodgeroo had embodied this idea in her writing decades earlier. Reading them together gives students a sense of how indigenous intellectual work has developed across the southern hemisphere. Australian and New Zealand indigenous traditions have been in conversation for many decades. Oodgeroo and Smith are two of the major voices in that long exchange.
Complements
Maya Angelou
Angelou, the great African American poet, worked in parallel with Oodgeroo across the Pacific. Both were poets of communities harmed by colonial violence. Both wrote with directness and emotional clarity. Both became cultural leaders, not just writers. Both faced critics who thought their work was more political than literary. Both have been increasingly recognised as major voices in late 20th-century literature. Reading them together gives students a sense of how poets from oppressed communities used their craft to speak for their people while also reaching universal audiences. The work of speaking truthfully about specific suffering has often produced poetry that crosses cultural lines.
In Dialogue With
Audre Lorde
Lorde, the African American feminist poet and essayist, was working at the same time as Oodgeroo. Both were Black women poets who insisted on speaking from their specific identities while also addressing wider human concerns. Both used poetry as political work. Both faced criticism for being too angry or too political. Both became foundational figures for later movements. Reading them together gives students a sense of how women of colour around the world were using poetry in similar ways during the same decades. Different specific contexts. Similar core work.
Complements
Robin Wall Kimmerer
Kimmerer, the Native American botanist and writer, makes arguments about human relationships with land and plants that have deep parallels with Oodgeroo's work. Both write from indigenous traditions that see humans as part of, not separate from, the natural world. Both write in ways that English-language readers can understand without losing the depth of the traditions they come from. Reading them together gives students a sense of how indigenous environmental thought has been developing across continents for generations. Oodgeroo was making these points decades before they became fashionable in mainstream environmental writing.
Complements
Rigoberta Menchu
Menchu, the Guatemalan Mayan activist, was a contemporary of Oodgeroo's. Both were indigenous women who became major voices for their communities in the 1970s and 1980s. Both used their literary work alongside political activism. Both became known internationally as representatives of indigenous experience. Both also had to navigate the complications of being treated as a single voice for entire diverse communities. Reading them together gives students a sense of how indigenous women's leadership was developing across the world in the late 20th century. Oodgeroo in Australia. Menchu in Guatemala. The patterns rhyme.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, Mudrooroo Narogin's Writing from the Fringe (1990) and his other works engage Oodgeroo's writing critically (note that Mudrooroo's own Aboriginal heritage has been disputed, complicating his standing as a critic). Penny van Toorn's Writing Never Arrives Naked (2006) places Oodgeroo in the longer history of Aboriginal writing. The Australian Indigenous Studies Program at Aboriginal Studies Press publishes ongoing scholarship. Recent work by Aileen Moreton-Robinson, Marcia Langton, and Anita Heiss continues the intellectual tradition Oodgeroo helped establish.