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  issue 208








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  Sport

 

Indigenous NRL players Matt Bowen, Sam Thaiday, Johnathan Thurston, Dean Widders and Preston Campbell. (AAP)

Historic plan rolls into action
Issue 146 - 07 Feb 2008

Sydney
RUGBY LEAGUE

Issue 146, February 7, 2008: NATIONAL Rugby League (NRL) has acknowledged the importance of the game in Indigenous communities by becoming the first professional sport in Australia to launch a formal reconciliation action plan last weekend, just in time for the Rudd government’s long overdue apology to the Stolen Generations.

Top Aboriginal players Johnathan Thurston, Sam Thaiday, Preston Campbell, Dean Widders and Matt Bowen - who will sit on an advisory group - helped launch the scheme at the start of the NRL’s centenary season last weekend.

Eleven percent of NRL players are Aboriginal Australians, and Thurston believes they have a crucial role to play in improving the lives of young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

“It will help bridge the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people,” Thurston said.

“Hopefully we will create a pathway for Indigenous kids from communities to help them to make better choices in life... and to realise their dreams.

“You just have to see the impact that NRL players have when they go to the communities.”

Widders, who was racially abused by South Sydney captain Bryan Fletcher during a match in 2005, said he believed the program could have a positive impact on the lifestyles of young Indigenous kids, and ultimately increase their life expectancy.

“The NRL has always been supportive of reconciliation, and doing things for Indigenous people,” he said.

“It’s great to make it official. It’ll give us that strength to go on and do more great things in the communities.

“There’s no game that can bring a community together like rugby league, and the kids really look up to the NRL players.”

The scheme has the official endorsement of Reconciliation Australia.

RA director Shelley Reys said the game had shown it had a vital role to play in the cause of reconciliation, and she added it was especially timely given the federal government’s decision to offer a formal apology to members of the Stolen Generations.

“Sport is the ultimate example of social cohesion,” Ms Reys said. And she should know.

Reys has a unique perspective on the changing profile of Indigenous people in Australian sport. Her late father Frank was a champion jockey who won the 1973 Melbourne Cup on Gala Supreme.

But throughout his career he hid his Aboriginal heritage, referring only to his Filipino roots.

“He knew it would give him a better chance of getting good rides,” she said.






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