65,000 years. Most people hear that number and it does not quite land. So here is another way to look at it. The pyramids in Egypt, the ones everyone thinks of as impossibly old, were built about 57,000 years after Aboriginal Australians were already living here. Stonehenge came 60,000 years later. These were not wandering nomads. They were people with languages, trade routes, laws, and a knowledge of this land so deep it took generations to build. Their descendants are still here. That is the part Australia has never quite figured out what to do with.
Who They Are
There are around 984,000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australia today, about 3.8 percent of the population. Before British ships showed up in 1788, there were somewhere between 300,000 and a million Indigenous people living across the continent, split into more than 500 distinct language groups. Each one had its own laws, its own customs, its own way of reading the land. They were not one people in any simple sense and never had been.
That diversity is easy to miss from the outside. An Aboriginal man from the Northern Territory desert and a Torres Strait Islander from the tropical islands north of Queensland share a broad identity but come from completely different worlds. About 41 percent of Indigenous Australians live in cities now. Another 15 percent live in remote communities where, in some places, they make up the majority of the local population. The problems facing those two groups look nothing alike.
What the British Did
When the First Fleet sailed into Botany Bay in January 1788, it was not coming to share. It came to take. What followed over the next century and a half was ugly in ways that Australia spent a long time not wanting to talk about.
Disease arrived before much else. A smallpox outbreak in 1789 tore through Aboriginal communities around Sydney while the colony was still getting on its feet. People with no immunity to the virus died in numbers that are hard to accurately count because nobody on the British side was keeping careful track. Then came the land. Settlers pushed outward and took what they wanted. The people already living there were moved off, killed, or left to get by on whatever ground was not considered worth having.
Researchers have documented at least 270 separate massacres of Aboriginal Australians in the 140 years after the British arrived. A major inquiry in Victoria concluded that what happened there amounted to genocide. That word makes some people uncomfortable. The events behind it are on the record.
The Children Who Were Taken
From the 1860s all the way through to the 1970s, the Australian government was taking Aboriginal children away from their families. Not occasionally. Systematically. Government agencies and church missions worked together to remove kids and place them with white families or in institutions. They were told not to speak their languages. They were told their parents were dead in some cases. The official goal, written plainly in government documents of the time, was to absorb Aboriginal people into white Australian society until their culture simply stopped existing.
The people who lived through that are known as the Stolen Generations. The damage did not end when the policies did. Trauma like that moves through families. It shows up in the children and grandchildren of people who were taken, in ways that researchers are still trying to fully understand. In 2008, Kevin Rudd stood up in parliament and apologized. For a lot of families it was too little, too late, and nowhere near enough.
The Gap That Will Not Close
The numbers on how Indigenous Australians are living today are hard to read without feeling something. The median household income is 28 percent lower than for non-Indigenous Australians. Forty percent of First Nations people go without basic essentials like stable housing, clean water, or reliable food, compared to 11 percent of other Australians. The imprisonment rate is fifteen times higher. Life expectancy is significantly shorter. Suicide rates, particularly among young people, are at levels that would be treated as a national emergency if they were happening in the general population.
These gaps have been measured, reported on, and discussed in parliament for decades. Some have barely moved. The programs that have actually shown results tend to be the ones run by Indigenous communities themselves, built around culture and connection rather than designed by government departments in Canberra and handed down.
The Referendum That Failed
In October 2023, Australians went to the polls to vote on something fairly straightforward. Should Indigenous people have a formal body that advises parliament on decisions that directly affect them. Sixty percent said no. Not a narrow result. Not a close call. A clear majority of the country looked at that question and decided against it.
The result landed hard in Indigenous communities. The campaign against it had been bitter in places, and the arguments made on both sides left people raw. A lot of Indigenous Australians who had put real hope into the referendum came out the other side feeling like the country had looked at them and said not yet, or maybe just no.
The conversation kept going though. South Australia set up permanent Indigenous representation in its parliament. Victoria is working toward something similar. Treaty negotiations are moving, slowly, in several states. Progress is uneven and frustrating and real all at the same time.
What Survived
Here is the thing though. After everything, the culture is still there.
Aboriginal art is the oldest continuing artistic tradition anywhere on earth, with rock paintings going back at least 30,000 years. Languages that were nearly killed off are being brought back. In 2021, around 77,000 Indigenous Australians reported speaking an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander language, up from 63,000 five years earlier. More people are identifying as Indigenous with every census, as families reconnect with heritage that was hidden or cut off for generations.
The Mabo case did not give Aboriginal Australians anything new. It just finally admitted what had always been true. The land was theirs. It had always been theirs. Two centuries of colonial settlement had simply proceeded as though that fact did not exist, and the courts had gone along with it until 1992. After that ruling and the long string of legal battles that followed, Indigenous Australians now hold title to around 54 percent of the continent. Two hundred years to get partial recognition of something that was never actually taken away legally. Just in every other way that mattered.
The 65,000-year story of Indigenous Australians is not something that ended. It is going on right now, in courts and communities and family kitchens and parliament buildings. A people that survived everything thrown at them are still here. Still pushing. The least the rest of the country can do is pay attention.
