Fighting For Justice: The Donald Thomson Story
By (Author) Bert Macklin
Longueville Media
Longueville Media
2nd July 2025
Australia
Paperback
336
In 1911, Donald Thomson at 10 years old was a lone figure in Melbournes Bayside, with its billabongs and creeks meandering to the sea. In his Naturalists Diary, he recorded his collection of wildflowers to wattles, seabirds to tiny blue wrens, mammals and reptiles, to fish and insects of every shape and hue. By 16, he was part-time editor of a national nature magazine.
As Australias first home-grown anthropologist, he met the only people who truly shared his worldview: the First Nations people of northern and central Australia. He wrote, We learned much about their language, social life, and customs, and of their elaborate rituals and tabus and we grew to love these people. It was this love for a world threatened with extinction that drove Donald Thomson for the rest of his life, fighting for justice amid a threatened invasion and the reality of a hostile and unrepentant occupation.
The UNESCO-inscribed Thomson Collection, which the Thomson family donated to Museums Victoria in 2024, documents more than 90 Indigenous communities and includes 11,000 photographs, 7620 metres of film, and 2500 pages of meticulously recorded field notes, making it one of the worlds largest ethnographic collections. One of these photos a group of ten men in their bark canoes on the Arafura Swamp inspired Rolf de Heers critically acclaimed 2006 film Ten Canoes.
Thomson is remembered as a friend of the Yolngu people and a champion of understanding Indigenous Australian culture and society by non-Indigenous Australians.
He thought black Bill Onus, Aboriginal activist
a fascinating and compelling read a significant contribution that shines light on a neglected figure much respected by Aboriginal leaders of his time. ANU Professor Emeritus, Nicholas Peterson
A passionate and compassionate exploration of an important Australian who despite clashes with the academy, missionaries, and government carried his fight for Indigenous justice and rights. Rita Metzenrath, AIATSIS Librarian, Indigenous rights activist and co-author of Big Sickness Come Ailan
Robert Macklin is the prize-winning author of 25 non-fiction works and four novels. His biographies of prominent Australians range from Albert Jacka VC to Hamilton Hume, the great journalist G.E. Morrison, and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.