Kempsey students like Tayla Iverarch, school captain of Melville High School, now learn and speak the local Dhungutti language, but for many Elders, forbidden to speak their language, their experience of education was of exclusion.
Kempsey South Public School Executive Principal Paul Byrne said the local public schools educated most of the area’s Aboriginal students and “amazing teachers and staff were not afraid to tell our kids about the past”.
He paid tribute to the Elders present as the “keepers of knowledge” who had inspired the student Reconciliation walk organised by Kempsey South Public School Early Years Transition teacher Auntie Vicki Willoughby, and Aboriginal Education Officers Sam Drew and Auntie Kim Daley.
Auntie Vicki, a Wiradjuri woman, asked the students to be proud and respectful of their Elders, acknowledge their suffering and life lessons, and “be brave enough to stand up for them and for each other”.
“Today we celebrate Reconciliation as a public school community. Today we walk as one,” she said.
Kempsey Shire Council Mayor Leo Hauville, a former teacher and principal at Macleay Valley public schools, said around 13 per cent of the town’s population of 30,000 people were Aboriginal.
“We acknowledge the past; we acknowledge the mistakes … the future is in the faces of the boys and girls here,” he said.
Students from the two high schools – Melville and Kempsey – were joined by primary schools from Aldavilla, Bellbrook, Crescent Head, Frederickton, Gladstone, Green Hill, Kempsey East, Kempsey South, Kempsey West, Kinchela, Smithtown, South West Rocks and Willawarrin.
Kempsey has a special significance in education as the first public school, Kempsey National School, was established there in 1848. The Department of Education observes 175 years of public education in 2023.