I’ve written quite a bit about my trip and visit to Australia. If you’ve read these posts — Tasmania, Bruny Island, Perth, Sydney, Melbourne — you may have noticed I made no mention of encounters with Aboriginal people.
Silence.
Unseen.
That wasn’t deliberate. It was unavoidable — I couldn’t write what I did not see or know how to name.
In all my experiences, in all the places I visited, I was struck by how little visible Aboriginal presence I encountered. I intentionally looked — on the streets, in the stores, in the everyday rhythm of public life.
That absence felt palpable.
And yet, what was very present was the Welcome to Country or Acknowledgement of Country. No meeting or public event started without it. It echoed across media, institutions, performances, and gatherings — a statement recognizing the Traditional Custodians of the land.
For Bruny Island, someone might say:
“I acknowledge the Nuenonne people of the South East Nation, Traditional Custodians of Bruny Island (Lunawanna-alonnah).”
Or in Melbourne:
“I acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we gather today, the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people of the Kulin Nation.”
I appreciated the practice. I still do.
But I also wrestled with the tension of it. The tension that makes me ask:
- What does it mean for a people to be acknowledged in words while their presence felt so unseen?
- How do you admire a country while also recognizing histories of displacement, dispossession, and attempted erasure?
Because appreciating a place and acknowledging injustice are not contradictions.
Australia gave me breathtaking coastlines, museums, architecture, wildlife, gardens, art, and moments that genuinely moved me. I stood in awe at the Sydney Opera House. I wandered through Tasmania’s quiet beauty. I watched kangaroos casually occupying golf courses as if they paid membership dues. Australia did not disappoint.
But admiration does not mean amnesia.
In the same way I expressed the duality of the 12 Apostles, that beauty and destruction often occupy the same landscape, the same is true of the absence-and-acknowledgment contradiction I observed in Australia.
And, nowhere did this sit more heavily with me than in the story of Truganini. It was relayed in pieces by the tour guide on my Bruny Island tour. My intrigue led me to research Truganini’s story.

Born around 1812, Truganini was a Nuenonne woman from Bruny Island, often remembered as one of the last survivors of her people after colonization devastated Aboriginal communities in Tasmania. She lived through profound violence and displacement. Family members were killed. Land was taken. Her people were pushed to the margins of the very place that had sustained them for generations.
Before her death in 1876, Truganini made a simple but profound request: that her body be treated with dignity and not exploited after death. She feared being displayed as a curiosity.
Yet her wishes were ignored.
Her remains were exhibited publicly for decades in a museum — a final indignity after a lifetime marked by dispossession. It would take many years before her ashes were finally returned to the sea near her ancestral homeland, fulfilling, belatedly, the dignity she had requested all along.
As part of my visit I took the 279-step climb to Truganini Lookout and for me, each step felt like a blow-by-blow walk into history.

At the top, there is an unobstructed view of the island stretching out in both directions — narrow, windswept, exposed, held together by a thin strip of land. Beautiful. But grounding too. Because the name, Truganini Lookout, carries the story of a woman who fought for the survival and dignity of her people — the Palawa, the Aboriginal people of Lutruwita (Tasmania).

I did not know her full story before arriving, but something about it tugged on my heartstrings because it did not feel distant to me.
Jamaica carries its own version of this ache.
The near disappearance of the Taino people.
The resistance of the Maroon, Nanny, who fought for the protection and freedom of her people.
The fragments we continue to hold onto today — names, memory, ancestry, stories — and the things we are still trying to recover and call by their rightful names. (See my post about Accompong.)
Travel Reveals Strange Mirrors
When I travel I almost always visit the museums or historical sites, looking out for what mirrors my own history and experiences. Sometimes travel reveals strange mirrors — like familiar names in unfamiliar places.
Kingston.
A name I know as home in Jamaica also exists in Tasmania.
It made me pause, first from the feeling of familiarity which made me reach for my phone to capture this sign post:

But, it was also a pause in recognition of different geographies but similar patterns.
Talawah & Palawa
The other mirror showed up in two words, not as a shared meaning but a shared feeling.
Palawa is the name for Aboriginal Tasmanians and it echoed a word deeply familiar to me as a Jamaican— talawah.
In Jamaica, talawah describes something small but fierce. Resilient. Tough. Quietly powerful. The kind of strength that survives.
And somehow, standing in a place shaped by dispossession and endurance, the echo between Palawa and talawah stayed with me. Different histories. Different peoples. Yet something familiar in the story of survival.
Maybe that is why Bruny Island tugged at my heart more than I expected.
Because beneath all its beauty sat something recognizable: the ache of what colonization takes, the endurance of those who survive it, and the reminder that history matters.

Australia did not disappoint.
But neither was I oblivious.
I can appreciate the beauty of what a country offers while still acknowledging its history and the injustices carried in its soil.
Perhaps that, too, is a kind of acknowledgement of country.
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