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Media
Release:

SENATOR GUY
BARNETT’S SENATE SPEECH ON THE LIFE OF WILLIAM
WILBERFORCE AND HIS IMPACT ON AUSTRALIA
What
did Wilberforce do for Australia?
The
waves created by his many societies for
liberation, evangelisation and education
washed over the Australian colonies
It will never do to think of your early
population as made up of the great unwashed;
for they were not unwashed by Wilberforce
and his merry men and determined women.
He
unleashed a cleansing flood, not only through
the large number of societies for human
betterment which he supported in Britain
which were reproduced in the Australian
colonies, but also through the influence
of the vast array of those who sought to
emulate him: not only clergy and missionaries,
but also settlers, governors and soldiers,
merchants and farmers, and their wives and
daughters.
In
his address Dr Piggin referred to Wilberforce
laying the foundations of the church in
Australia. He also referred to the governors,
specifically Governor Lachlan Macquarie.
Macquarie
was governor from 1810 to 1821 and transformed
Sydney town through the implementation of
Mr Wilberforce’s principles.
In his first year in office Macquarie named
a new township, on the north bank of the
Hawkesbury, Wilberforce: ‘... in honour
of and out of respect to the good and virtuous
Wm. Wilberforce, Esq., MP - a true Patriot
and the Real Friend of Mankind.’
Stuart
Piggin also referred to Darling and the
abolition of transportation, to La Trobe
and the care of Aboriginal people and the
influence that William Wilberforce had in
that regard. He said: ‘In 1833 Mr Wilberforce
died, but his influence continued to spread
in ever widening circles.
In that very year the British House of Commons
began an inquiry into the condition of native
peoples in British settlements. Henceforth
indigenous peoples were to be accorded justice,
rights, civilisation, and Christianity,
accepted voluntarily.
This
resolution of the House of Commons came
from a motion from Mr Thomas Fowell Buxton,
who assumed leadership of the anti-slavery
movement from Mr Wilberforce.’
About
Wilberforce’s influence in Australia, Stuart
Piggin said: ‘Mr Wilberforce accepted that
he was not in politics to serve his own
interests, but to act as a servant of Christ,
a good model for a nation on the brink of
self-government.
His
godly army abolished transportation, elevated
a convict population, and transfused gospel
values into your commercial institutions,
your banks and newspapers and your legal
system.’
He
referred to the two principles that Wilberforce
lived by, including: ‘... that Christianity
must be allowed to shape our social systems
and national structures as well as our individual
morality, and that vital religious faith
is required if our cherished national values
are to produce morality with civility.’
In conclusion, I will say that the movie
Amazing Grace will premier in the theatrette
at Parliament House on 19 June, sponsored
by me with World Vision.
It is based on the Wilberforce story, and
I am very much looking forward to it.
I seek leave to table the public lecture
by Dr Stuart Piggin, entitled ‘William Wilberforce
and his impact on Australia’.
Leave
granted.
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