Advertisement
Home Latest News

Rodger Corser And His Daughter Zipporah Team Up For Indigenous Recognition

"When I have children and my dad has grandchildren I want their future to be as bright as any other kid's"

The year 2020 marks 250 years since James Cookโ€™s first voyage to Australia, yet today Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people still arenโ€™t acknowledged in our constitution.

The time is now for recognition and reform, as called for in the Uluru Statement from the Heart.

This month, marie claire joins forces with some of Australiaโ€™s biggest and brightest names to unite for change. Here, actor and producer Rodger Corser and his daughter Zipporah Corser- Anu, a performing arts student, speak about the importance of Indigenous recognition and why we need change for the next generationโ€ฆ

Rodger Corser, Actor and Producer

โ€œMy eldest daughter Zippy has Torres Strait Islander heritage, so this issue is particularly close to me. Over the years Iโ€™ve noticed that Australia has done a lot for multiculturalism โ€“ which is amazing โ€“ but I believe whatโ€™s been lacking is the acknowledgement of Indigenous people, and a melding of cultures. 

Advertisement

As white Australians, all you see in the media is reflections of yourself, and as such you have an innate confidence that you can achieve anything. Indigenous Australians like Zippy donโ€™t have that, and progress is long overdue. I think this move to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the First Peoples is only positive for every single Australian. Certain politicians fear that with any type of acknowledgment thereโ€™ll be some sort of retribution โ€“ I donโ€™t know what theyโ€™re so afraid ofโ€.

Zipporah Corser-Anu, Performing Arts Student

โ€œiโ€™m a singer and a dancer and thatโ€™s how I express my culture and connect with it. Itโ€™s how my culture has been passed down, and Iโ€™m proud of it. But one of the biggest issues we face as a people in racism.Iโ€™m a lighter -skinned Indigenous person, so Iโ€™ve experienced colourism and prejudice โ€“ being told that I canโ€™t do certain things because Iโ€™m not dark enough, or not Aborigional enough. But Iโ€™m lucky that, even though Iโ€™m only 17, my parents are both in the media, so I have a way of sharing my voice, through my mum [Christine Anu] as a Torres Strait Islander woman and my dad as a non-indigenous man. I feel like I want to create a future that is equal for everyone. When I have children โ€“ and my dad has grandchildren โ€“ I want their future to be as bright as any other kidโ€™sโ€.

This article originally appeared in the February 2020 issue of marie claire. 

Related stories


Advertisement
Advertisement