“How I feel like we’re in a place today that,you know,five years ago we probably might not have been as a nation. The way we’re talking about racism,the way our kids in school are educating us about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people - there is a true and real empathy for Indigenous people and culture,I feel at the moment.”
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Since the interview was conducted late last year,the AFL has dealt with several racial incidents,headlined by former Adelaide captain Taylor Walker’s racist remarks at a SANFL game. The widespread condemnation of Walker’s behaviour contrasts with the environment in 2015,when the league and several club bosses refused to condemn fans for booing Goodes.
The issue came to a head after a game in Perth in which large sections of a partisan West Coast crowdresoundingly jeered the Swans champion.
Pridham and other Swans leaders had stayedquiet on the topic at Goodes’s behest, but were given the green light by the player to speak up.
The chairman declared anyone who continued to boo Goodes is racist,while coach John Longmire came out in support for his former captain,who took a week off from the game.
Goodes said it was in the aftermath of the Eagles match that he realised he no longer wanted to play the sport he had once loved.
“It was just horrible over there and that’s where it all just hit me:that this is going to be my last year of football and this is going to be my sending out,” Goodes said.
“I’m going to be booed all the way to the end,the final end. It just hit me. I just couldn’t fathom,you know,that would be the end of my career. I’ve played with a couple of legends that have finished with the fairytale - Jason Ball and Paul Williams - but for me,I was just like,‘Well,this is the way it’s going to end. I want to make sure I end it on my terms’.”
Goodes bowed out after the Swans’ 2015 semi-final loss to North Melbourne at ANZ Stadium,during which a pocket of Kangaroos fans also booed him.
“It just took a complete weight off my shoulders,and that weight was having to go to work for two hours and put up with that shit that was happening;that I couldn’t pinpoint who it was,” Goodes said.
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“I couldn’t see their faces,but it was just happening around me in my work environment. It doesn’t happen today. It doesn’t happen on the streets,never did.”
Goodes says he hopes Indigenous kids today,like those in his foundation,can learn from his experiences.
“The message that I have,especially for the GO students,is there’s always going to be people who boo us,whether it’s overtly or not. They’re going to be there,” Goodes said.
“They’re going to try and knock us down from being who we want to be and who we deserve to be and the success that comes with that.
“You’re just going to keep rising above it and if hopefully in reflecting on what happened to me in their own world,in their own circumstances,that they can draw on some of that strength and power to make them get through those tough times in their life,then that’s me having to make that sacrifice for the future generations.”
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