Actually, this is a relatively recent thing:Bucks5 wrote:Is this Policital correctness gone mad?
OK, so some indigenous people refer to it as Invasion day, but the public holiday is to celebrate the landing of the first fleet on THE DATE IT HAPPENED.
http://australiaday.com.au/studentresources/history.asp
So, if anything, the Fremantle council are only returning to the long-held tradition of holding Australia Day a few days early or late. But I doubt that slightly adjusting the date will solve this problem; if you're celebrating it on the 28th instead of the 26th you're still commemorating the same anniversary more or less.From its inception, the NSW council encouraged 'grass roots' celebrations, working primarily with the 177 local government authorities in the promotion of the celebration of Australia Day. However, the Australia Day public holiday was still held on the Monday closest to 26 January and to the broad community it was just another holiday.
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It took until 1994 for united Australia-wide celebrations to take place on 26 January and national celebrations have been held on the actual day since that year.