‘The New Boy’ is a 2023 film by Kaytetye man Warwick Thornton which explores the collision between white Catholic and Aboriginal spirituality. It does this through an exploration of various baptismal motifs such as that of a new birth and body, along with death and resurrection. In short, a captured Aboriginal boy seeks to incorporate Catholicism into his own spirituality, but is eventually, himself, incorporated by white Catholicism.
The ‘New Boy’ (Aswan Reid) is captured by police and
brought to a remote orphanage run by nuns. He doesn’t speak English and is
largely silent throughout the film. He refuses to wear a shirt and eat with
cutlery. He hugs trees. He plays with baby snakes. These function as signs of
his difference and his resistance to being incorporated in the white Catholic
community.
The orphanage is run by Sr Eileen (Cate Blanchett), who
assumed leadership extra-canonically when the parish priest died a year
earlier. Sr Eileen is a complex character. Powerful yet vulnerable. Spiritually
earnest and zealous for the boys’ education yet given to systematic lying and
alcoholism. She symbolises a form of white Catholic feminism, assuming the
authority of a white male priest yet without the protection of the white male
church.
Sr Eileen’s subordinates are Sr Mum (Deborah Mailman) and
George (Wayne Blair). Both ‘incorporated’ Aboriginal people who nevertheless
keep up their resistance in small ways. Sr Mum is the cook and domestic
servant. She apparently became a nun when her own children were taken from her.
She is kind to the New Boy. George is a farm labourer who is glad to have work
a long way from the centre of white society. He puts the children of the
monastery to work but is disinclined to participate in church services. He is
gruff and cold, but clearly cares.
The New Boy’s otherness is also seen in his ‘clever’
powers. He has a light with him, by which he heals a boy bitten by a snake and
saves the life of another boy burned in fire. George recognises that the boy is
‘clever’, a practitioner of Aboriginal magic, and worries that word will get
out and their remote peace will be destroyed. Sr Eileen seeks to interpret the
New Boy’s healing powers as signs of saintliness. It is her way of seeking to incorporate the
boy into the white Catholic body.
The New Boy’s best attempt to incorporate Catholicism
into his own spiritual frame comes when a large crucifix, made of wood, arrives
at the monastery. Seeing the crucifix as a suffering being somehow connected to
trees, the New Boy seeks to heal its wounds by taking some baby snakes and
placing them before the crucifix. In many Aboriginal cultures, snakes are
powerful ancestral beings able to heal and bring life to the dead. The snakes
are killed by the worshippers, but one is made alive again by the New Boy and
effects a transaction by which the wounds of the tree/Christ are connected to
self-inflicted wounds on the hands of the New Boy.
Perhaps because there are not enough snakes involved in the magical exchange, the living being is not healed and the New Boy becomes unwell from his wounds. Sr Eileen interprets his wounds as stigmata and prays for his recovery. When the New Boy is well enough to walk again, Sr Eileen baptises him in the church and his wounds are apparently healed with baptismal water. The New Boy notices that the crucifix no longer communicates with him as a living being. And when he seeks to summon his light later the same day, it is extinguished. The New Boy begins to wear a shirt and, having lost his ‘spark’, apparently submits to white Catholic ways. Having sought to incorporate the white Catholic imagination into his own, he finds that it is he who is incorporated.
Theological Reflection
At the heart of the film is a confrontation between two
ways of imagining the world, each seeking to absorb or incorporate the other.
Will native Aboriginal ways prevail, or the coloniality of the white Catholic
body?
Historically, the white Catholic body prevailed. In this
frame, the New Boy can be seen as an ‘innocent’, a saint, sent by God to bring
hope and healing to this small, struggling, Christian orphanage. He is a Christ
figure whose eventual baptism fulfills all righteousness and incorporates him
fully into the body of the church. I am, however, part of a very small group of
Aboriginal thinkers who are seeking to subvert this colonial logic in the field
of theology by seeking to re-read white Christian interpretations within the more
ancient frame of Aboriginal spirituality.
From this point of view, the crucifixion of Christ is not
about God sending a messiah to save the world. It is about the suffering of country,
and of Aboriginal community and culture, under colonial power. For us, there is no ‘divinity’ other than
‘the dreaming’ and its embodiment in the cosmic community of country and kin.
In this perspective, the resurrection of Christ is not an
intervention, extra nos, from a God beyond, but the innate capacity of
country and kin to renew themselves, to be reborn from the compost of old
bio-matter. This means a ritual washing in water is not, primarily,‘baptism’as an
incorporation in the white Christian community. Water symbolises, for us, the
lifeblood of country, distributed to the whole body of the land via the ‘veins’
of creeks, rivers and other waterways. For us, water rites dramatize a participation
in the dying and rising of country itself, including country’s capacity to
resist the power of coloniality for stealing, killing and destruction.
This capacity is beautifully illustrated in Glenn Loughrey’s painting ‘From the Depths, Life Rises’, where the colonial imagination is represented by squares, much like fields cultivated in the European manner. At one point there is a circle within a circle. This represents the capacity of country, and of mob, to resist the colonial imagination.
On this anniversary of the failed referendum, I simply note that this theological work is necessary because Australia remains a colony in which First Peoples, our culture and our spirituality, are still regarded as little more than a footnote in the 'great' theological narratives from Europe that have made modern Australia what it is.
Garry Worete Deverell
A short paper given at the Talanoa Oceania conference held at United Theological College, Paramatta, on April 5, 2024.
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