Australia Day: If not Jan 26, then when?
January 26 is a date that continues to divide Australia. For some it is “Australia Day”. For many First Peoples, it is Invasion Day, Survival Day, or a Day of Mourning.
In this episode of Community Conversations, host Sarah Sherry (Clothing The Gaps) is joined by Laura Thompson (Gunditjmara woman, CEO and co-founder of Clothing The Gaps) and Phil Jenkyn (OAM, barrister and community activist, co-convener of the Australia Long Weekend idea) to unpack why January 26 is not a date to celebrate, how community pressure is shifting public perception, and a new proposal that aims to create a more inclusive national moment.
Together they explore symbolism and policy, cultural safety, truth-telling, and a practical alternative: an Australia Long Weekend set on the second last Monday in January, designed to keep a summer long weekend while quarantining January 26 as a day for mourning and reflection.
Key takeaways
* January 26 carries deep hurt for First Nations people, and the day often brings heightened racism and division.
* Symbolism matters: changing an administrative date can be a meaningful first step toward larger justice and truth-telling.
* The Australia Long Weekend proposal aims to keep a summer celebration without anchoring it to colonisation.
* Momentum is growing because the issue now impacts many Australians, including new citizens who feel uncomfortable with January 26 ceremonies.
* Change requires respectful dialogue, accuracy, and shared responsibility from community, media, business, and government.
* Links and resources:
* Sign petition [https://c.org/86vCsrnYrv]
* Australia Long Weekend website [https://www.australialongweekend.com.au/ ]
* Clothing The Gaps Not A Date To Celebrate campaign [https://www.clothingthegaps.com.au/pages/not-a-date-to-celebrate ]
* Learn more about January 26 and its history [https://www.clothingthegaps.com.au/blogs/blogs/8things-you-need-to-know-about-january-26 ]