Lyall Munro Jnr Explained

Lyall Thomas Munro Jnr (born 1951) is an Aboriginal Australian elder, a former activist and member of many organisations serving Aboriginal Australians. He is known as a local leader in the town of Moree, New South Wales. he is the son of Lyall Munro Snr, and the husband of Jenny Munro.

Early life and education

Lyall Thomas Munro, a Gamilaroi man,[1] was born in Moree, New South Wales,[2] in 1951, one of 12 children[2] of Lyall Munro Snr and Carmine Munro.[3] Lloyd Munro, vice-chair of the Moree Local Aboriginal Land Council, is a brother.[4] They lived on New Moree Mission.[2]

He first attended Moree Aboriginal School.[2] The children were not allowed out of the school, and Moree had a reputation for being a racist town. Munro recalled that it was only the Lebanese Australian traders who would sell to Aboriginal people at the mission. Aboriginal people were not allowed to try clothes on in the shops in the town.[2]

When Lyall was 13, in 1965, the Freedom Ride led by Charles Perkins drove into Moree. The activists took six young Aboriginal boys,[2] including his nine-year-old brother Dan, from Moree Mission to the segregated swimming pool. Dan was one of the first to get into the pool, Lyall joined the bus on a trip from the mission to the town, and recalls being pelted with things by the local townspeople.[4]

He later attended the De la Salle College in Armidale (now O'Connor Catholic College), and at the age of 14, attained his instructor's badge in lifesaving.[5]

Early working life

Munro moved to Sydney in 1967 or 1968 with his cousin Sammy Munro, and while staying with relatives at Bondi Junction went out and met other Aboriginal people at the Foundation for Aboriginal Affairs.[2]

He worked at various places on the Central Coast, New South Wales, including Umina, Newcastle, and Wagga Wagga, returning to Moree in 1969 before going to work on cotton farms in Wee Waa in 1972. The workers formed the Wee Waa Aboriginal Cotton Chippers Caucus[2] and went on strike there in protest against poor wages,[1] which was successful.[6] During this time he met Ghillar Michael Anderson and Billy Craigie, who were co-founders of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in January 1972, as well as Paul Coe and Sol Bellear, from the new Aboriginal Legal Service (ALS).[2]

In 1972 met his future wife Jenny Coe,[1] younger sister of Paul Coe and Isabel Coe, in Sydney.[7] [1] Billy Craigie later married Isabel.[8]

Activism

Munro participated in the setting up of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in 1972; the 1982 Commonwealth Games protests; 1988 Bicentennial protests; anti-Bjelke-Petersen actions in Queensland; and the dismantling of the gates of the Parliament House, Sydney, and Parliament House, Brisbane, after negotiations concerning Aboriginal land rights had failed to produce any result. He saw Paul Coe and Billy Craigie as heroes of resistance, and John Newfong as a brilliant Aboriginal journalist. His father, Lyall Munro Snr, also joined some of the protests, as did some parents of other activists.[2]

Moree is close to the Queensland border, and many of the Aboriginal people have relatives in both states, and there are many ties between Moree and Cherbourg Aboriginal communities. Munro regards himself as a Murri, and was proud to be involved in activism in Queensland, where racism was rife and the laws oppressive.[2]

He acted as a spokesperson when a 19-year-old Aboriginal man was shot and killed by white people in Moree in 1982.[2]

He later said:[2]

In 2014, Munro, his wife Jenny Munro, and other activists set up the Redfern Aboriginal Tent Embassy, to protest against a planned redevelopment, known as the Pemulwuy Project, by the Aboriginal Housing Company of The Block in the Sydney suburb of Redfern.[9] [7]

Career

Munro was a founding member of the NSW Aboriginal Legal Service (ALS), and the Aboriginal Housing Company,[1] [10] [11] and has served many other Aboriginal organisations, including the Black Theatre, Redfern Aboriginal Children's Services, Redfern All Blacks, and the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services.[1]

In 1976, Munro was one of 11 directors at the Aboriginal Housing Company in Redfern, Sydney.[12]

In 1981 he was photographed by Juno Gemes speaking at Parliament House, Sydney, as a representative of National Aboriginal Legal Services.[13]

In 1984 he was elected chairman of the ALS, succeeding Paul Coe, after working for the service for 10 years as a field officer and administrator.[14] In the same year, he became the inaugural co-ordinator of National Aboriginal and Islander Legal Service Secretariat (NAILSS), and, together with Paul Coe and Sugar Ray Robinson, travelled to Geneva, Switzerland, as delegates to the United Nations Human Rights Council in 1984 and 1985. He spent some time in Strasbourg, running a program and giving lectures at the International Institute of Human Rights. However he missed Australia and felt lonely in Europe, so vowed never to leave Australia again.[2]

Recognition

Munro is mentioned in several articles in Dawn magazine between 1963 and 1973.

A photographic portrait of Munro taken by renowned Aboriginal photographer Mervyn Bishop is included in the Sydney Elders exhibition at the Australian Museum.[1] The exhibition was mounted in 2012, and represents a selection of Elders who have "contributed to the important role of culture, education, health, community or social justice".[15]

he is known as a local leader in Moree.[4]

Family

Munro's wife is Jenny Munro.[7] They have a son called Jason, who features with Lyall Jnr in a photograph taken by Juno Gemes at Erambie Mission in 1978.[16]

He is known by the nickname "Lyally Mo" to close friends.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lyall Munro . . 7 December 2021 . Laura. McBride. 21 November 2022.
  2. Web site: Forde . Susan . Pulling down fences . . 22 October 2019 . 21 November 2022. Saturday, 12 August 2016, Moree, New South Wales..
  3. Web site: Davies . Jessie . State funeral held for freedom rider Uncle Lyall Munro Senior . ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 11 July 2020 . 21 November 2022.
  4. Web site: Finding the Moree way . Robert. Milliken . Inside Story . 11 June 2021 . 22 November 2022.
  5. Web site: Assimilation in NSW 1952 - 1975: Items of Interest from NSW Aborigines Welfare Board's Magazine "Dawn". The Koori History Website . 26 November 2022. Copy of an article in Dawn, January/March 1966.
  6. Web site: Peoples History of Australia . 2020-04-09 . People's History of Australia Podcast. Episode 12 – Black Power in rural NSW: the 1973 Aboriginal Cotton Chippers' Strike . 2023-03-01 . The Commons Social Change Library . en-AU.
  7. An interview with Jenny Munro . Gaele Sobott . Gaele . Sobott . Jenny. Munro. 24 January 2015 . 21 November 2022.
  8. Web site: Pullin . Lara . Billy Craigie: Gomilaroy warrior . Green Left . 2 September 1998 . 21 November 2022.
  9. Web site: 'The long haul' . Honi Soit . 6 July 2014 . Justin. Pen. The Redfern Tent Embassy is not just fighting for affordable housing, but Aboriginal autonomy and self-determination..
  10. Web site: Trenoweth . Samantha . The AHC and the battle for Redfern's Block. The Koori History Website . The Saturday Paper. 12 July 2014.
  11. Web site: Redfern – Gaele Sobott . Gaele Sobott . 24 February 2015 . 26 November 2022.
  12. Web site: Aboriginal Biographical Index entry . . 21 November 2022. From Bellear, R.W. Black housing book. 1976, p.16. Bellear, R. W..
  13. Trove
  14. Web site: Aboriginal Biographical Index entry . . 21 November 2022. Elected new Chairman, Aboriginal Legal Service Ltd.; Headquarters at Chippendale and 6 country branches. Son of NAC member, Lyall Munro of Moree, has worked for 10 yrs as a field officer and administrator. Succeeds Paul Coe [Jnr]..
  15. Web site: Sydney Elders exhibition . The Australian Museum . 2 June 2021 . Laura. McBride. 16 November 2022.
  16. Web site: Lyall Munro, Jr. with his son Jason at Erambie Mission, Cowra, New South Wales, 1978 . . 1 January 1978 . 17 November 2022.